Las Vegas Review-Journal

With tirades against Comey, Trump sends harmful message on leaking

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With their condemnati­ons of former FBI director James Comey, President Donald Trump and his mouthpiece­s are doing their best to characteri­ze leaking as a dirty, damaging business.

“LEAKER & LIAR,” the president raged on Twitter.

“A self-admitted leaker,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders said during a White House press briefing.

“He’s an admitted leaker,” Kellyanne Conway said on “Good Morning America.”

Admitted leaker — sounds like they’re saying Comey’s guilty of a crime.

But there are two major problems with that message.

First, it suggests that all leaking is harmful, which is 100 percent not the case. When done responsibl­y, leaking can help cure what ails our democracy by exposing impropriet­y and setting change into motion.

Take Watergate. The then-anonymous source who supplied Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein with informatio­n about criminalit­y in the Nixon administra­tion, Deep Throat, was a government leaker. He was later identified as Mark Felt, the FBI’S assistant director during 1972 and 1973.

The lawlessnes­s discovered through the Watergate investigat­ion was a broadbased conspiracy that led to 40 government officials being indicted or incarcerat­ed, so there’s no question that leaking was good for the American people in that case.

And that’s just one example. Some of the most important important leaking happens at the municipal, county and state levels, when people loyal to the public interest blow the whistle on impropriet­ies by elected officials and administra­tors. That saves lives, literally.

So despite what Trump and his crew would have Americans believe, leaking often is done by well-intended public servants as a final recourse when they think the government won’t clean itself up.

That being the case, what Trump is really trying to do with his blanket condemnati­on is impose a code of silence — an omerta, to use a Mafia term. He’s demanding that government employees and others not talk about him without his permission, and to be loyal to him regardless of what he does.

That’s the dangerous business here, not what Comey has done. Trump acts as if the entire government has obligation­s to him. It doesn’t. Instead, the obligation of those in positions of authority is to serve the American people and the Constituti­on.

The second major problem with the White House’s condemnati­ons, at least in Trump’s case, is that there’s no factual evidence to support that Comey leaked anything other than memos that he had written to document his interactio­ns with Trump.

The memos were not classified, and there’s been no indication that Comey has shared any informatio­n that would put Americans in harm’s way. Had that been the case, then this situation would be an entirely different matter.

As is, though, the memos were appropri- ate for public consumptio­n.

Comey said he released them after he was fired and Trump issued a tweet saying Comey “better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversati­ons before he starts leaking to the press!”

Comey’s goal in leaking was to trigger the appointmen­t of a special counsel, he said. So far, there’s no reason to doubt that he was acting for the public good.

Again, this would be a completely different situation if Comey had leaked classified, intelligen­ce-related info. Those who leak such material are still called traitors, and rightly so.

But when people come forward responsibl­y with info that would expose wrongdoing, we need to protect them.

There are lots of things in government that need to be secret, but the vast majority of activities in our government should always take place in the full light of day.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / AP FILE (2017) ?? THEN-FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. Comey blasts President Donald Trump as unethical and “untethered to truth” in a new book in which he casts Trump as a Mafia boss-like figure who sought to blur the line between law...
CAROLYN KASTER / AP FILE (2017) THEN-FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. Comey blasts President Donald Trump as unethical and “untethered to truth” in a new book in which he casts Trump as a Mafia boss-like figure who sought to blur the line between law...

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