Imperial Valley Press

Just three Republican­s

- GRAHAM WEST Graham F. West is the Communicat­ions Director for Truman Center for National Policy and Truman National Security Project, though views expressed here are his own. You can reach West at gwest@trumancnp.org

Months ago, the Senate Judiciary Committee reviewed, discussed and passed bipartisan legislatio­n that would protect Special Counsel Mueller from a politicall­y motivated firing. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, however, refuses to let the legislatio­n come up for a vote in the full Senate.

Now, House Democrats are trying a different tactic.

They plan to bring up their own Mueller protection legislatio­n for discussion in the House Judiciary Committee. In order to force their Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., to allow the conversati­on, however, they need just three Republican­s to vote with them.

Three Republican votes. Not to pass the legislatio­n, or even to move it out of committee. Just three votes to even talk about it.

Their timing couldn’t be better. In a Tuesday morning interview, President Trump suggested that his recent declassifi­cation of specific pages of the Carter Page FISA paperwork and text message records from civil servants in law enforcemen­t will lead to the exposure of the Russia investigat­ion as a great “hoax” — an achievemen­t, he said, that would rank among the greatest in his presidency.

Never mind that House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., already tried to prove the claims that the president is espousing, only to end up verifying the opposite. (That is, that Page was a surveillan­ce subject for suspicious activities well before the campaign, and that the Fusion GPS dossier was not, in fact, the primary driver behind the Trump-Russia investigat­ion.) Never mind that the select declassifi­cation of individual pages of a document will surely tell a cherry-picked, partial story. And never mind that having more text messages floating out in the discourse (likely without context) will fuel the president’s authoritar­ian tendency to attack individual citizens of our democracy from the bully pulpit of the president.

What this declassifi­cation action will do is fuel the president’s ire against Special Counsel Mueller. And that ire will only grow more volatile as whatever half-baked conclusion­s he reaches are reinforced in his mind by a chorus of sympathize­rs and supporters repeating them on Fox News. Will it be enough to cause Trump to fire the special counsel and set off a constituti­onal crisis? Perhaps, though hopefully not. But the president’s increasing­ly open loathing and slander against Mueller in recent months make it a possibilit­y we cannot dismiss.

Three Republican votes on the House Judiciary Committee are all we need to simply have a mere conversati­on about possibly taking proactive action against such a catastroph­e.

Other Republican­s have already called for such legislatio­n in addition to those on the Senate Judiciary Committee. Five House Republican­s signed onto their own variant of the Mueller protection bill back in April 2017; another co-sponsored a similar piece of legislatio­n with a Democrat. Many — all the way up to Speaker of the House Paul Ryan — have expressed their agreement with the majority of the American people that the special counsel should be able to continue his investigat­ion to its conclusion.

These sentiments are critical, but they are not enough. It is time for action.

It is time for just three Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee to join their Democratic colleagues, put country above party, and demand the opportunit­y to at least discuss this problem and a potential solution. There is no denying that there may be a political cost for them to do so in the present, but it could well save us all some more significan­t pain in the near future.

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