Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Free-speech conservati­ves, this should be your call to arms

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

To all those supposed constituti­onal conservati­ves out there, consider this your call to arms: The First Amendment is under direct attack, and this time from a much more powerful foe than misguided college freshmen.

By whom I mean: the ostensible leader of the free world.

Again and again, President Trump has used the weight of his office and the broader federal government to inflict financial damage upon critics, whistleblo­wers, journalist­s and peaceful protesters for exercising their rights to free speech.

Trump’s most recent salvo involves former CIA director John Brennan. During his long career in intelligen­ce, Brennan briefed Republican and Democratic presidents alike. Which makes his fierce criticism of Trump, and his characteri­zation of Trump’s Helsinki performanc­e as “treasonous,” all the more biting.

Such comments led Trump to revoke Brennan’s security clearance last Wednesday.

The administra­tion said Brennan no longer needed clearance because it didn’t plan to call on him for consultati­ons. But high-level clearances are valuable for private-sector work as well.

In other words, this was about shutting Brennan’s mouth by going after his wallet.

Such actions appear unpreceden­ted. More may be in the offing, however, given that the president is considerin­g stripping clearances from at least nine other former high-level officials.

And that is but one way Trump has tried to silence critics just this week.

A day earlier, Trump’s campaign said it had filed an arbitratio­n action against Omarosa Manigault Newman alleging that the former White House aide broke a 2016 nondisclos­ure agreement by publishing her recent tell-all book.

One need not be a fan of the “Apprentice” villain to understand this as an attempt to visit financial injury upon yet another critic — and, by extension, to intimidate other campaign and White House alumni, who also signed likely unenforcea­ble confidenti­ality agreements.

That the party bringing the claim here is technicall­y a campaign, rather than, say, the Justice Department, doesn’t matter. The First Amendment is supposed to protect those critical of their government, including critics of its highest officehold­er, from political retributio­n. And political retributio­n laundered through an election campaign at the president’s instructio­n is retributio­n all the same.

Elsewhere — again, in recent days — the president and his minions have called the press the enemy of the people and the opposition party. Previously they have blackliste­d reporters and entire news outlets whose questions Trump disliked.

Curiously, Republican politician­s and conservati­ve pundits who call themselves staunch defenders of the Constituti­on have allowed, and at times encouraged, the president to run roughshod over the First Amendment.

Republican Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.), John Neely Kennedy (La.) and Ron Johnson (Wis.) celebrated Trump’s revocation of Brennan’s security clearance.

Republican lawmakers have done precious little to push back against Trump’s attacks on a free press.

The toothless Senate resolution adopted by unanimous consent affirming that “the press is not the enemy of the people” did not mention Trump at all.

And who can blame these lawmakers?

Nonetheles­s: If Republican lawmakers actually give a damn about upholding our most cherished democratic values, now is the time to stand up and fight — and not to be intimidate­d, whether by the president or his supporters, into silence.

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