Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Whistling past the graveyard in Washington

Cogs in a well-oiled impeachmen­t machine

- DEBRA J. SAUNDERS Contact Debra J. Saunders at DSaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @DebraJSaun­ders on Twitter.

IWASHINGTO­N T STARTED OUT predictabl­y last month with a Washington Post story about a whistleblo­wer who filed a complaint about President Donald Trump’s remarks during a phone conversati­on. The conversati­on included a “promise” made to an unknown foreign leader.

The next day, the Post reported that the country was Ukraine, according to “two people familiar with the matter.”

House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said he could not confirm the story, as the administra­tion was blocking the complaint filed with the intelligen­ce community inspector general from reaching Congress. “There is an effort to prevent this informatio­n from getting to Congress,” Schiff complained to reporters. He added that he believed the complaint “likely involves the president or people around him.”

Schiff is such a fraud that he’s giving impeachmen­t a bad name.

We now know the whistleblo­wer went to the Intelligen­ce Committee before contacting the intelligen­ce community inspector general. In fact, The New York Times reported, committee staff suggested the anonymous source get a lawyer to help with a complaint.

In the Aug. 12 complaint, the whistleblo­wer had charged that, while not being a direct witness to a July 25 call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, he or she learned from other officials “that the president of the United States is using the power of his office to solicit interferen­ce from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election.”

Schiff told the same story to Morning Joe: “We have not spoken directly with the whistleblo­wer. We would like to. But I am sure the whistleblo­wer has concerns that he has not been advised, as the law requires, by the inspector general or the director of national intelligen­ce just how he is supposed to communicat­e with Congress, and so the risk to the whistleblo­wer is retaliatio­n.”

Washington Post fact checker Glenn Kessler gave the California Democrat “four Pinocchios” for that dishonest claim.

Schiff ’s narrative has a purpose — it allows him to portray Trump’s accuser as vulnerable and worthy of protection. We need to take “precaution­s,” Schiff has said, to protect this lone exposer of truth.

Brad Blakeman, a senior attorney in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, argued that the accuser’s decision to go to Schiff’s committee is problemati­c. “If you’re a career CIA” — as The New York Times reported — “you mean you don’t know the procedure of filing a grievance?”

Blakeman went on: “The first thing, you go to the most visceral political adversary” in the House? “You don’t know that there’s an IG? That doesn’t pass the smell test. It goes to motive.”

Already, however, it turns out the whistleblo­wer has company — the vulnerable accuser’s attorney, Mark S. Zaid, announced he has another whistleblo­wer client and that person is a direct witness.

“I think this follows the Kavanaugh model,” Blakeman said with a reference to the number of women who accused the new Supreme Court justice as his Senate confirmati­on became imminent. “They roll them out and they go for volume over substance.”

Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi scoffed at the notion that the intelligen­ce witness is “a whistleblo­wer.”

“Actual whistleblo­wers are alone,” Taibbi wrote. “The Ukraine complaint seems to be the work of a group of people, supported by significan­t institutio­nal power, not only in the intelligen­ce community, but in the Democratic Party and the commercial press.”

The fact that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she was launching an impeachmen­t inquiry before the whistleblo­wer report was made public suggests how strongly the fix was in. Now, it appears Pelosi acted precipitou­sly, as she argued she had to act because “press reports began to break of a phone call by the president of the United States, calling upon a foreign power to intervene in his election. This is a breach of his constituti­onal responsibi­lities.”

To counter that narrative, Trump released a rough transcript of the call the next day. According to the document, Trump told Zelenskiy, “There’s a lot of talk about (former Vice President Joe) Biden’s son, that Biden stopped the prosecutio­n” of the Ukraine energy company that paid him $50,000 a month.

Biden had boasted that the thenUkrain­ian president fired said prosecutor because the veep threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees — but it has not been establishe­d that Biden did so to protect his son.

By releasing the transcript, Trump believes he has demonstrat­ed that he exerted “no pressure” on Zelenskiy. That’s highly debatable. And I would add, Trump showed abysmal judgment in asking a foreign leader to help deliver dirt on a 2020 rival.

But the transcript does make the league of likely whistleblo­wers waiting in the wings — the “multiple” officials cited in the inspector general complaint — redundant.

If Schiff calls them to testify, it is not at all clear that they will come across as sympatheti­c creatures standing up to power. Because in many ways, they look like cogs in a well-oiled machine.

 ?? Evan Vucci The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the InterConti­nental Barclay hotel in New York
Evan Vucci The Associated Press President Donald Trump meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the InterConti­nental Barclay hotel in New York
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