Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Trump target is no Dem puppet

- Dana Milbank is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

Twenty-three years ago, I arrived at the Wall Street Journal’s Washington bureau as a congressio­nal reporter at about the same time as a scruffy and perpetuall­y untucked fellow named Glenn Simpson.

I’ve been friends with “Shaggy,” as I dubbed him, ever since. Over the years, I’ve watched him make mischief: exposing the Clintons’ campaign finance abuses, including the “Chinagate” scandal of 1996; scoring a key scoop in the Clinton travel office scandal; bedeviling Clinton financier Terry McAuliffe; and forcing the resignatio­n of James Johnson, a top Obama adviser in 2008, over the Countrywid­e scandal.

Now Simpson is accused of being a left-wing hit man for Hillary Clinton.

Right. And I’m the editorial director of Breitbart News.

President Trump has been leading the charge to portray Simpson and Fusion GPS, the opposition-research firm Simpson started in 2009 when he left the Journal, as puppets of the Democratic Party and the Clinton campaign, “colluding” with Russia to find dirt on Trump. Trump has been tweeting about pay received by Fusion from Clinton and other Democrats, and the “COMPLETE FRAUD” of a dossier produced by a Fusion contractor, which Trump alleges sparked the FBI’s probe of him.

I get it. Trump’s best defense in the Russia probe is to go on offense, saying Clinton and the Democrats were the ones who colluded with Russia, using a double bank shot involving Simpson, Fusion and their contractor, former British spy Christophe­r Steele.

The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board attacked Simpson and Fusion last week as “political hit men” who produce “dirt for hire,” and accused them of smears and “obfuscatio­n.” Journal columnist Kimberly Strassel postulated that Fusion has “alarming ties to Russia and potentiall­y facilitate­d a disinforma­tion campaign during a presidenti­al election.”

This is the same Journal editorial page that repeatedly praised Simpson’s work when he was bringing down Democrats. It hailed “enterprisi­ng reporters such as the Journal’s own Glenn Simpson” for exposing the hypocrisy of the Clinton fundraisin­g operation.

Also attempting to paint Simpson as a leftist contract killer is Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, and his Judiciary Committee staff. The newly released transcript of the staff interview with Simpson is full of suggestion­s that Simpson was politicall­y motivated. Grassley has suggested that Fusion’s work is “dirty,” not “reliable” and “Russian propaganda.”

But surely Grassley knows Simpson spent years probing Clinton money scandals as a journalist and at Fusion, looking into whether they took official actions in exchange for contributi­ons and whether the Clintons (and the Obama administra­tion) abused EB-5 visas, which essentiall­y allow wealthy foreigners to buy U.S. citizenshi­p.

If Grassley doesn’t know this, he might want to check with Jason Foster, Grassley’s chief investigat­ive counsel, who has received informatio­n Simpson dug up during Foster’s time on Judiciary and Foster’s previous stint as an investigat­or for Republican Rep. Dan Burton’s House Government Reform Committee.

A Grassley spokesman said Foster “has not had any significan­t working relationsh­ip with Glenn Simpson.”

David Bossie, a conservati­ve activist who worked with Foster on the Burton committee, praised Simpson to Bill O’Reilly back then for exposing that McAuliffe protected himself from probes by giving “a lot of informatio­n to reporters.” Simpson had shown how McAuliffe “cashed in” on labor ties.

After the 9/11 attacks, Simpson probed terrorism financing. Then he went to Brussels under Journal bureau chief Peter Fritsch (now his Fusion partner) and became fascinated with Russian money. In March 2007, he wrote to Paul Manafort with a prescient inquiry, saying he had “credible informatio­n” that the future Trump campaign manager represente­d Ukrainian official Viktor Yanukovych without registerin­g as a foreign agent. A decade later, Robert Mueller indicted Manafort over exactly that.

At Fusion, Simpson has investigat­ed political money for clients of all persuasion­s, including a hedge-fund manager and more than a few Trump supporters. So it follows that when conservati­ve Paul Singer’s Washington Free Beacon and then the Democrats wanted Trump research, Simpson used his intelligen­ce contacts from Brussels to probe Trump’s financial ties to Russia.

I don’t share Simpson’s interest in journalism for hire, nor do I approve of his willingnes­s to take distastefu­l clients.

But I do know he’s a dogged gumshoe with one overriding ideology: distrust of all politician­s.

 ?? Dana Milbank
Columnist ??
Dana Milbank Columnist

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