Chattanooga Times Free Press

JOHN KELLY IS WRONG; THESE WERE NOT GOOD PEOPLE

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Former White House chief of staff John Kelly — the man who enthusiast­ically presided over the separation of children at the border; defended President Donald Trump’s lies and accommodat­ion toward Russia; and enabled arguably the most destructiv­e president in our history — told the Atlantic: “The vast majority of people who worked in the White House were decent people who were doing the best they could to serve the nation.” He added, “They’ve unfortunat­ely paid quite a price for that in reputation and future employment. They don’t deserve that. They deserve better than that, because they kept the train from careening off the tracks.”

This is dead wrong. These people are not victims. Their reputation­s have been besmirched for the best of reasons: They participat­ed in an administra­tion unparallel­ed in its corruption, meanness, racism and authoritar­ianism.

The excuse that things would have been worse without White House aides is weak, at best. Would we have lost even more than the 317,000 Americans who died from COVID-19 if not for them? Would we have been even more lax in failing to respond to Russia’s interferen­ce in our election, its bounties on U.S. troops or its hacking of our government?

Self-congratula­tory aides did not stop the child-separation policy. Nor did they prevent Trump from trying to delegitimi­ze the election. Or from lying about hush money to pay off an adultfilm actress. Or from failing to warn the public early on that COVID-19 was far worse than the flu. Or from refusing to wear a mask. Or from encouragin­g Chinese President Xi Jinping in his efforts to place millions of Uighurs in concentrat­ion camps. Or from spewing more than 20,000 lies. Or from extorting Ukraine to manufactur­e dirt on a political rival. Or from defaming our intelligen­ce community. Or from using tear gas on peaceful protesters outside the White House. I could go on, but you get the point: Their hands are dirty because they enabled a dishonest president and allowed him to continue his reign of chaos, death and authoritar­ianism.

The number of senior officials who quit on principle is close to zero. The number of former Cabinet officials who came forward during the impeachmen­t to give testimony is zero.

There were a handful of officials who behaved commendabl­y and arguably did prevent greater harm. Christophe­r Krebs, the former director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, did his best to shoot down disinforma­tion about the election and call out efforts to discredit the results. He was fired as a result. Likewise, we saw honorable public servants such as Fiona Hill, Alexander Vindman and Marie Yovanovitc­h step forward to provide testimony about Trump’s impeachabl­e conduct at the expense of their jobs. Christophe­r Wray performed heroically as director of the FBI. Beyond that, however, it is hard to think of someone in this administra­tion who did more good than harm.

The notion that a lowly aide is exempt from condemnati­on because he or she “just” typed memos or “just” made travel arrangemen­ts or “just” set up meetings is misguided. When a regime routinely sets out to undermine our democracy, neglect its obligation­s to defend the Constituti­on and lie, it must rely on all the middle- and low-level aides to do all the tasks that produce its horrible results. Trump could do what he did because of the John Kellys, the Kayleigh McEnanys, the Kellyanne Conways and many other aides whose names are not familiar to us.

That these people are suffering damage to their credibilit­y and condemnati­on from their fellow Americans is a positive sign our body politic still retains an appreciati­on for democracy and a moral compass.

 ?? Jennifer Rubin ??
Jennifer Rubin

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