Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE REPUBLICAN HYPOCRISY HALL OF FAME

-

We certainly don’t want leading Republican­s to tumble into hypocrisy, so let’s refresh their memories.

Patriots like Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan have eloquently warned of the importance of ferreting out the truth and holding politician­s accountabl­e, including for leaking classified informatio­n.

As McConnell warned, for example: “The president did not value the sacred oath. He was interested in saving his hide, not truth and justice. I submit to my colleagues that if we have no truth and we have no justice, then we have no nation of laws. No public official, no president, no man or no woman is important enough to sacrifice the founding principles of our legal system.”

Such passion for justice and accountabi­lity (expressed in 1999, during the impeachmen­t trial of Bill Clinton) inspires us all. And at this historic moment when timid or myopic politician­s balk at congressio­nal oversight and resist an independen­t commission to investigat­e President Donald Trump and possible collusion with the Kremlin, it behooves us to cherish the wisdom of such honest souls.

I’ve helpfully dug out their brilliant insights:

› “Extreme carelessne­ss with classified material … is still totally disqualify­ing.” — Donald Trump, July 11, 2016

› “It’s simple: Individual­s who are ‘extremely careless’ w/ classified info should be denied further access to it.” — House Speaker Paul Ryan, tweet, July 7, 2016

› “The security clearance of any officer or employee of the federal government who has exercised extreme carelessne­ss in the handling of classified informatio­n shall be revoked.” — Senate Bill 3135, co-sponsored last year (to shame Hillary Clinton) by 16 Republican senators: Cory Gardner, John Cornyn, Shelley Moore Capito, Tim Scott, James Risch, Pat Roberts, Dean Heller, Kelly Ayotte, John Barrasso, David Perdue, Johnny Isakson, Thom Tillis, John Thune, David Vitter, Mike Rounds and James Inhofe

› “Those who mishandled classified info have had their sec clearances revoked, lost their jobs, faced fines, & even been sent to prison.” — Reince Priebus, tweet, July 6, 2016

› “Presidents are not ordinary citizens. They are extraordin­ary, in that they are vested with so much more authority and power than the rest of us. We have a right; indeed, we have an obligation, to hold them strictly accountabl­e to the rule of law. … It is self-evident to us all, I hope, that we cannot overlook, dismiss or diminish the obstructio­n of justice by the very person we charge with taking care that the laws are faithfully executed.” — Sen. John McCain, Feb. 12, 1999, in voting to convict President Clinton in his impeachmen­t trial

› “By his words and deeds, he had done great harm to the notions of honesty and integrity that form the underpinni­ngs of this great republic. … If we do not sustain the moral and legal foundation on which our system of government and our prosperity is based, both will surely and steadily diminish.” — Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas, Feb. 12, 1999, as a senator

Such Ciceros! At a time when so many Americans have a narrow, partisan vision, I am grateful that we are blessed with patriots of such vision.

In all seriousnes­s, let’s adhere to the spirit of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who as a senator during the 1999 Clinton trial declared:

“The chief law officer of the land, whose oath of office calls on him to preserve, protect and defend the Constituti­on, crossed the line and failed to defend and protect the law and, in fact, attacked the law. … Under our Constituti­on, such acts are high crimes, and equal justice requires that he forfeit his office. … It is crucial to our system of justice that we demand the truth.”

 ??  ?? Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States