Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Some dignity in dark times

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

Let us now praise Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III. Rejected for a judgeship by the Senate over accusation­s of racism, the Alabamian later became a senator known for hostility toward the Voting Rights Act, outspoken opposition to (even legal) immigratio­n, and being the first senator to back Donald Trump for president.

But it turns out that, deep down, Sessions has a redeeming characteri­stic: a quaint faith in the rule of law.

For the umpteenth time, Trump this past week attacked his attorney general, whom he once dubbed “Mr. Magoo,” over Sessions’ proper decision to recuse himself from the TrumpRussi­a investigat­ion. “What kind of a man is this?” Trump asked on Fox News.

The assault continued Friday.

Sessions, who long has endured Trump’s mockery, this time returned fire. “While I am attorney general, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerat­ions,” he said in a statement. He added that he is “proud of the work we have done in successful­ly advancing the rule of law.”

Last week may turn out to have been a turning point. It was the moment the justice system landed two blows against an unfit leader: the conviction of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort for bank and tax fraud, and the guilty plea by former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who implicated Trump in a campaign finance crime. More significan­tly, Trump’s own people began to turn against him.

A leader who demanded loyalty but rarely gave it is now being repaid in kind. For a man who craves approval above all else, this must feel lonely. The most qualified didn’t want to join his administra­tion, and Trump was suspicious of them, but he presumed loyalty among the misfits he assembled.

“The only reason I gave him (Sessions) the job is because I felt loyalty,” Trump told Fox News. This echoed Trump’s infamous dinner with then-FBI Director James Comey, when, according to Comey, Trump said: “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty.”

Now it seems even the most “loyal” are not necessaril­y so:

Last weekend came reports that White House counsel Donald McGahn was cooperatin­g extensivel­y with special counsel Robert Mueller’s team.

On Tuesday, Cohen reached a plea deal that implicated the president in the clandestin­e efforts to buy the silence of two women alleging affairs.

Thursday brought news that David Pecker, publisher of the National Enquirer and an old Trump friend who allegedly helped hush one woman’s story, was granted immunity in exchange for cooperatin­g with prosecutor­s.

On Friday, word came that Allen Weisselber­g, a longtime Trump ally and chief financial officer at the Trump Organizati­on, also had been granted immunity.

Meanwhile, Omarosa Manigault Newman, a star of “The Apprentice” who Trump brought to the White House, is perched at No. 1 on the New York Times bestseller list with her tell-all, “Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House.”

They join Sessions and others who previously “betrayed” Trump: Director of National Intelligen­ce Daniel Coats, who publicly contradict­ed Trump on Russian election interferen­ce; and Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, who long has endured Trump’s enmity for authorizin­g and protecting the Mueller probe.

Trump now is trying to dissuade Manafort from cooperatin­g with Mueller by dangling a pardon and declaring his “great respect” for the felon. But Manafort presumably remembers Trump disowning him, citing his “very limited role” in the campaign.

To be sure, Trump still has broad support among congressio­nal Republican­s. But that’s not loyalty. It’s self-interest, because 87 percent of Republican voters support Trump.

Typical of this opportunis­m is Sen. Lindsey O. Graham, RS.C., who Thursday said Trump is “entitled” to switch attorneys general. Graham previously said there would be “holy hell to pay” if Trump fired Sessions.

This earned Graham a rebuke from Sen. Ben Sasse, RNeb., who, on the Senate floor, warned against firing “the attorney general because he’s not executing his job as a political hack.”

In ordinary times, it would be a matter of course, not heroism, for an attorney general to believe in the rule of law.

But the struggle in the Trump administra­tion is between those with no integrity and those who retain a shred. In dark times, we need the shreds.

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