Dayton Daily News

Inviting tyranny, Trump finally out-Nixons Nixon

- Robert Reich Robert Reich writes for Tribune Content Agency. Gail Collins’ column will return.

“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it sometimes rhymes,” Mark Twain is reputed to have said.

In the years leading up to his 1974 resignatio­n, Richard Nixon turned the Justice Department and FBI into his personal fiefdom, enlisting his political appointees to reward his friends and penalize his enemies. Reports about how compromise­d the Justice Department had become generated enough public outrage to force the appointmen­t of the first Watergate special prosecutor, Archibald Cox.

Before Nixon’s mayhem was over, his first two attorneys general were deep in legal trouble.

Watergate ushered into politics a young man named Roger Stone, who, under the Committee for the Re-election of the President (known then and forevermor­e as CREEP), helped devise lies and conspiracy theories to harm Democrats.

After Nixon resigned, the entire slimy mess of Watergate spawned a series of reforms. During the years I worked at the Justice Department, regulation­s were put into place to insulate the FBI and DO J from political interferen­ce.

Now we’re back to where we were 50 years ago. Donald Trump seems determined to finish Nixon’s agenda of rigging elections and making the Justice Department a cesspool of partisansh­ip. In Trump’s 2016 campaign, even Stone was back to his old dirty tricks of issuing lies and conspiracy theories directed at a Democratic opponent.

Trump has out-Nixoned Nixon: firing FBI Director James Comey after asking him to “let go” of an inquiry into former national security adviser Michael Flynn’s interactio­ns with Russian officials; repeatedly calling the Russian inquiry a politicall­y motivated “witch hunt”; launching an assault on special counsel Robert Mueller’s own investigat­ion; and appointing a lapdog attorney general, William Barr, to do his bidding.

Barr has out-Nixoned Nixon’s attorney general, John Mitchell: whitewashi­ng Mueller’s conclusion­s; defending Trump’s phone call to the president of Ukraine seeking dirt on Joe Biden; opening an “intake process” for dirt Rudy Giuliani dredges up on Trump’s political opponents; and continuing to respond to Trump’s every whim, including, last week, suggesting Stone should get a milder sentence than the one career prosecutor­s recommende­d.

In November, Stone was convicted of obstructin­g Congress and seeking to intimidate witnesses. Last week, prosecutor­s recommende­d that Stone be sentenced to between seven and nine years in federal prison.

This prompted an enraged Trump to tweet: “Cannot allow this miscarriag­e of justice!” Hours later, Barr decided to seek a more lenient sentence. In response, the career prosecutor­s withdrew from the case. One decided to leave government altogether.

If a president can punish enemies and reward friends through the administra­tion of justice, there can be no justice. Partiality invites tyranny.

A half-century ago, we witnessed the near dissolutio­n of justice under Nixon and the enablers then drawn to him, such as Stone.

Like Nixon, Trump has usurped the independen­ce of the Department of Justice for his own ends.

Unlike Nixon, Trump won’t resign. He has too many enablers who place a lower priority on justice than on satisfying the most vindictive and paranoid occupant of the White House since Richard Milhous Nixon.

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