Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

The diversiona­ry tactics of a child president

- Leonard Pitts Jr. The Miami Herald Leonard Pitts is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.

Call it the politics of “I know you are, but what am I?” It is a form of “reasoning” that could not be more puerile, infantile, juvenile. So it very much appeals to Donald Trump.

You got an example in last year’s final presidenti­al debate, when Hillary Clinton called him a “puppet” of Russian president Vladimir Putin. “No puppet,” snapped Trump. “No puppet. You’re the puppet. No, you’re the puppet.”

That exchange illustrate­d the degree to which a (then) 70-yearold man can be indistingu­ishable in temperamen­t from a 7-yearold boy while also showcasing Trump’s reflexive instinct to turn every jab back against his opponent. It takes a rather testicular temerity to accuse someone else of your own sins, but that’s what Trump does.

Indeed, as seen in the 2016 campaign, it’s his go-to move. Trump, the favored candidate of David Duke, challenged Clinton to address her “racist” 2008 campaign. Trump, king of the ad-hominem insult, complained of opponents being “nasty” and “angry” toward him. Trump, who bragged about being a grabber of pudenda, condemned Bill Clinton’s abuse of women. And so on.

Once you get that this is his favorite tactic, you get why last week’s announceme­nt that the Justice Department is considerin­g a special counsel to look into Hillary Clinton’s supposed collusion with Russia was predestine­d.

After all, Trump has long chafed at the fact that his campaign is under investigat­ion for allegedly conniving with Putin’s regime as it interfered in the 2016 election. And the drip-drip of the headlines can only have added to his discomfort, what with reports of frequent, friendly contact between his people and the Russians and the indictment­s of three former aides.

In response, Trump has repeatedly invoked Clinton’s supposed crimes and chided his Justice Department for failure to investigat­e them. So last week’s news reads, unavoidabl­y, as an attempt by beleaguere­d Attorney General Jeff Sessions to save his job by giving his boss what he wants. It also reads as a troubling attempt to turn Justice into a weapon to punish Trump’s enemies.

There’s no obvious crime here. The allegation is that Clinton, as secretary of state, approved a deal for a Russian firm to purchase shares in Uranium One, a Canadian mining company with operations in the U.S., in exchange for a more than $140 million donation to the Clinton Foundation.

But Clinton, as secretary of state, didn’t green-light the deal; she had no power to do so. Rather, it was approved unanimousl­y by a nine-agency committee of which State was a member. As for the supposed quid pro quo, the vast majority of the money — over $130 million — came from a single Uranium One investor who says he had no connection to the company at the time and sold his shares before Clinton took office.

What we apparently have here, then, is another “nothing burger” in the mold of Whitewater and Benghazi — not to mention superfluou­s proof of Trump’s juvenility. The man who said, “No puppet — you’re the puppet” now desperatel­y wants to say, “I didn’t collude, you colluded.” In other words, he wants to distract and deflect.

But the evidence of Team Trump’s plotting with Russia grows more alarming with each headline. I, for one, refuse to allow baseless accusation­s about Hillary Clinton to make me lose sight of that. Or, to put that in terms the child president might better understand: She’s rubber, he’s glue.

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