Chattanooga Times Free Press

COMEY, STEPHANOPO­ULOS LIKE ‘GAME OF THRONES’ DUO

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If you closed your eyes and listened to former (and fired) FBI Director James Comey in conversati­on with former Clinton aide (and Clinton Foundation Donor Zero) George Stephanopo­ulos on ABC, you would have heard two things that were disturbing.

One was the gossipy silkiness of their voices, Comey and Stephanopo­ulos cooing at each other, eviscerati­ng President Donald Trump like the intriguers Varys and Littlefing­er in “Game of Thrones.”

The other was the lack of talk about Andrew McCabe, the former assistant director of the FBI who was fired recently and became something of a hero to the anti-Trumpers, with $500,000 stuffing his GoFundMe account.

According to the Department of Justice inspector general’s office, McCabe arranged for informatio­n to be leaked to The Wall Street Journal about investigat­ions into the Clintons. He did this to shield himself from a Journal story about how his wife had accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds from Clinton-related politicos in a failed run for office in Virginia.

After setting up that leak, McCabe lied four times to FBI investigat­ors and threw other FBI officials under the bus, according to the report.

McCabe wasn’t a focus of the ABC interview. Instead, Comey and Stephanopo­ulos feasted on salaciousn­ess about Trump.

“He had impressive­ly coifed hair, it looks to be all his,” Comey said of Trump, who fired Comey for leaking and whom Comey loathes.

It didn’t sound like an FBI director. It sounded like a catty takedown by a fashionist­a.

“I confess, I stared at it pretty closely, and my reaction was, ‘It must take a heck of a lot of time in the morning, but it’s impressive­ly coifed.’ He looked — his tie was too long, as it always is,” Comey said. “He looked slightly orange up close with small white half-moons under his eyes, which I assume are from tanning googles. And otherwise looked as I had expected him to look from tele-, as I thought he looked on television.”

Stephanopo­ulos: “You even clocked the size of his hands?”

There was plenty of fodder for Trump haters: hints that the so-called Steele dossier, paid for by Hillary Clinton’s campaign, about Russian prostitute­s and golden showers may “possibly” be true, though Comey supplied absolutely no evidence it was true.

He just left it out there. Littlefing­er or Varys would have smiled, faintly as is their way, at this mastery of technique.

Whenever Comey would dish on something particular­ly disgusting, Stephanopo­ulos would respond delightedl­y. “Stunning,” he’d say.

Watching the two of them on ABC, you couldn’t miss that they’re well practiced in the dark arts of Washington.

Those who read history probably understand that our American capital is the Versailles of the modern age. The French of old had their courtiers, ministers and intriguers, and we have them too. There is the art of hinting and letting the damage dangle in the air.

But there is also great art in knowing what not to say, of inscribing the negative space around an issue, of avoiding the inconvenie­nt truths, and this marks them as masters of the game.

They’re not alone. ProTrump Fox news pundit Sean Hannity has proved he’s practiced in what not to say too.

Hannity has been loudly vilifying the investigat­ion of Trump by special counsel Robert Mueller and recently the raids on the offices of Trump’s personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen.

But Hannity hid the fact that he was a Cohen client, as recently revealed in court.

Hannity is now in the same boat as selective truth tellers Comey and Stephanopo­ulos.

One who doesn’t appear to play it that way is Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz, an Obama administra­tion holdover, who issued his report on McCabe. You should read it for yourself.

Horowitz’s report on the FBI and the Obama Justice Department’s handling — or not handling — of the Clinton investigat­ions is due out in a few weeks.

And in it, Americans expect to learn about the political intrigues in the FBI and the Justice Department under Obama.

It will be an ugly but necessary thing, just as the Mueller report is necessary once it’s complete.

Sunlight is always necessary, especially now, with so many players like Varys and Littlefing­er in the Washington shadows.

 ??  ?? John Kass
John Kass

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