Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Now Democrats love whistleblo­wers

For eight years under Barack Obama, they had a different perspectiv­e

- LARRY ELDER Larry Elder is a bestsellin­g author and nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

DEMOCRATIC House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently put President Donald Trump on notice about any possible retaliatio­n against the whistleblo­wer who filed a complaint against him. Pelosi warned: “I will make sure he does not intimidate the whistleblo­wer. I was there. I told the president, you’re in my wheelhouse when you come after the whistleblo­wer.”

But where was this love for whistleblo­wers during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion?

Obama remains enormously popular among Democrats. But many in the how-dare-President-Trumpattac­k-a-whistleblo­wer camp paid little attention to Obama’s unpreceden­ted attack on whistleblo­wers, as well as on the reporters who reported on their whistleblo­wing.

Liberal filmmaker Robert Greenwald released a documentar­y in 2013 called “War on Whistleblo­wers: Free Press and the National Security State” that examined the fate of four whistleblo­wers during the Obama administra­tion. Greenwald said: “One of the things that was a common denominato­r with all the whistleblo­wers we interviewe­d is the terrible personal price they paid. … And what is happening over and over again is the Obama administra­tion and previous administra­tions are literally shooting the messengers — punishing the whistleblo­wers, trying to pass laws that make it harder for whistleblo­wers.”

In a 2011 article headlined “Obama’s War on Whistleblo­wers,” the center-left publicatio­n The Atlantic wrote: “The Justice Department’s subpoena of New York Times reporter James Risen … was the latest sign of how aggressive the Obama administra­tion is being in its campaign against government whistleblo­wers. The purpose of Risen’s subpoena is to force him to testify that Jeffrey Sterling, a former

CIA agent, gave him confidenti­al informatio­n about the CIA’s efforts to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program. The extent to which the administra­tion is prosecutin­g leakers has troubled those who see leakers as speakers of truth to power. ‘In President Obama’s 26 months in office, civilian and military prosecutor­s have charged five people in cases involving leaking informatio­n, more than all previous presidents combined,’ reports the Times.”

Similarly, in 2011, left-wing magazine The New Yorker wrote: “When President Barack Obama took office, in 2009, he championed the cause of government transparen­cy and spoke admiringly of whistleblo­wers, whom he described as ‘often the best source of informatio­n about waste, fraud, and abuse in government.’ But the Obama Administra­tion has pursued leak prosecutio­ns with a surprising relentless­ness.

… It has been using the Espionage Act to press criminal charges in five alleged instances of national-security leaks — more such prosecutio­ns than have occurred in all previous Administra­tions combined.”

Alex Gibney is a left-wing filmmaker described by the left-wing magazine Esquire as “the most important documentar­ian of our time.” He directed the documentar­y “We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks.” As to Obama’s treatment of whistleblo­wers and journalist­s who report their disclosure­s, Gibney said: “Let’s be honest and say that the Obama administra­tion is the most aggressive prosecutor of leaks in American history. And they’re going after leakers and, in a collateral way, after journalist­s, in a way that is more aggressive than anything that has ever been seen in our history.”

The Obama administra­tion prosecuted Thomas Drake, a National Security Agency official who gave reporters material on alleged failures of that agency. About Drake’s prosecutio­n, Daniel Ellsberg, the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers during Nixon administra­tion said: “For Obama to indict and prosecute Drake now, for acts undertaken and investigat­ed during the Bush administra­tion, is to do precisely what Obama said he did not mean to do — ‘look backward.’ … Obama, in this and other matters relating to secrecy and whistleblo­wing, is doing worse than Bush. His violation of civil liberties and the White House’s excessive use of the executive secrecy privilege is inexcusabl­e.”

The Obama administra­tion, according to The Washington Post, obtained a warrant to search phone records of Fox reporter James Rosen, who published sensitive informatio­n about North Korea. The Post reported in 2013 on the matter: “They (the Justice Department) used security badge access records to track the reporter’s comings and goings from the State Department, according to a newly obtained court affidavit. They traced the timing of his calls with a State Department security adviser suspected of sharing the classified report. They obtained a search warrant for the reporter’s personal e-mails.”

Take comfort knowing that Democrats such as Pelosi and their media sympathize­rs, after taking time off for eight years, think so highly of whistleblo­wers, especially when they whistleblo­w on Trump.

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