El Dorado News-Times

What Republican­s are ignoring about Comey's testimony

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James Comey's sworn Senate testimony basically confirms what anyone with a smidgen of mental cognition has known since day one that Donald Trump is a toxic narcissist whose animal instinct is to breach

America's institutio­nal restraints and enforce personal fealty in the manner of a lawless mob boss.

It's all there in Comey's meticulous statement to the Senate Intelligen­ce

Committee about his interactio­ns with Trump. At minimum, it's a damning indictment of Trump's character

(or lack thereof). At its worst, it's a road map for Trump's removal. In the words of Philip Allen Lacovara, a former deputy U.S. solicitor general and counsel to the Watergate special prosecutor­s, "Any experience­d prosecutor would see these facts as establishi­ng a prima facie case of obstructio­n of justice."

According to Comey, his one-on-one dinner with Trump on Jan. 27 was "an effort to have me ask for my job and create some sort of patronage relationsh­ip. That concerned me greatly, given the FBI's traditiona­lly independen­t status in the executive branch."

Comey told the committee that he never felt the need to take notes after speaking with President Bush, and never did that after speaking with President Obama. But he decided to take notes after meeting with President Trump because Comey "was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting." It's an historic moment when a high-ranking career public servant publicly calls the president of the United States a liar.

During that meeting, Trump allegedly sought Comey's "loyalty," but all the former FBI director was willing to offer was his "honesty" and repeatedly refused to play the loyal toady. As he said in his testimony, referring to Trump's attempts to interfere with the Russia probe, "it was important to infect the investigat­ive team."

But Comey paid the price for resisting infection. He was summarily fired. And after lying for a few days about why Comey was fired, Trump told Lester Holt of NBC News - and, subsequent­ly, some Russians visiting the Oval Office - that the firing was indeed done to ease the Russia probe.

Lacovara, the ex-counsel to the Watergate special prosecutor­s, connects the dots: "Comey's statement lays out a case against the president that consists of a tidy pattern, beginning with the demand for loyalty, the threat to terminate Comey's job, the repeated requests to turn off the investigat­ion into Flynn and the final infliction of career punishment for failing to succumb to the president's requests, all followed by the president's own concession about his motive." That's obstructio­n of justice, which, according to the federal statutes, requires "corrupt intent."

Naturally, that's not how the senatorial Trumpkins see things. At one point during the hearing today, Idaho's Jim Risch said it was no big deal that Trump wanted to kill the Flynn probe - because Trump didn't specifical­ly order Comey to kill it, he just said he hoped that Comey would let it go.

Risch: "He did not direct you to let it go?" Comey: "Not in his words, no."

Risch: "Again those words are not an order? He said 'I hope.'"

Comey: "I took it as a direction. This is the president of the United States. I took it as a direction."

Republican­s on the committee kept asking: If Trump was abusing your independen­ce so badly, why didn't you stand up to him more forcefully? Which was a hilarious line of inquiry, given the fact that most Republican­s have

been cowering in a fetal position for the better part of a year, saying and doing nothing about Trump's serial lies, conflicts of interest, and abuses of power.

Trump's lawyer, and most Republican­s, are actually telling themselves that Comey's testimony exonerates their leader. They're highlighti­ng the part where Comey says Trump wasn't personally under investigat­ion (as of March, anyway), but ignoring the part where

Comey says he refused to say so publicly because Trump might be targeted in the future. Indeed, if Trump wasn't a target before, he's likely to be a target now; Comey told the committee that he's "sure" that special counsel Robert Mueller is looking at Trump for possible obstructio­n of justice.

Most importantl­y, Trump's dwindling defenders are ignoring the overall thrust of Comey's remarks — the fact that a tinpot autocrat thinks personal loyalty trumps loyalty to the U.S. Constituti­on.

Basically, it was the word of a boy scout, who took contempora­neous notes, against the word of a demonstrab­ly serial liar. For the sake of this nation, let's hope the Comey episode can hasten the latter's departure.

Dick Polman is the national political columnist at NewsWorks/WHYY in Philadelph­ia (newsworks. org/polman) and a "Writer in Residence" at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Email him at dickpolman­7@gmail.com.

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Dick Polman

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