Las Vegas Review-Journal

Special counsel finds no crime by Biden but punishes him anyway

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Special counsel Robert Hur’s report letting President Joe Biden off the hook for his handling of classified documents dropped a bigger problem than a prosecutio­n in the White House’s lap: a withering portrait of the 81-year-old commander-in-chief as a man whose elevator may not go all the way up.

Hur makes clear that Biden’s mishandlin­g of national secrets isn’t equivalent to Donald Trump’s. The former president went to great lengths not to cooperate with investigat­ors; the current president cooperated fully. The former president asked others to destroy documents and then lie about it; the current president did not. Those distinctio­ns are essential.

But, as Hur puts it, “Biden’s memory was significan­tly limited, both during his recorded interviews with the ghostwrite­r in 2017, and in his interview with our office in 2023.”

Hur then states that convicting Biden would be difficult, for “Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympatheti­c, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

That’s not all. Notes like the one that “Mr. Biden has long viewed himself as a historic figure” come across as gratuitous and snide.

Editoriali­zing is well and good for an editorial page to engage in. A special counsel ought not make such pronouncem­ents; he should deliver a just-the-facts summary of the case at hand, bringing charges or not. Jim Comey erred hugely in his 2016 statement explaining why he wasn’t charging Hillary Clinton — and here, Hur largely repeats the mistake.

Relatedly, it’s worth noting, as some leftwing commentato­rs did, that Democrats (Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton and Biden) are routinely investigat­ed by Republican special counsels (Ken Starr, Comey and Hur), while Republican­s (George W. Bush and Trump) are fortunate to have counsels of their own party affiliatio­n (Patrick Fitzgerald and Bob Mueller) probe their alleged misdeeds.

That said, the problem of Biden’s age is not going away. It’s understand­able that the White House scrambled to have the president address the press Thursday, a forum in which he proved intelligen­t and clear-headed in explaining the complex situation in the Middle East — even as he accidental­ly referred to Abdel Fattah El-sisi as the president of Mexico, not Egypt.

While he’s clearly less nimble than he used to be, Biden has long struggled with off-the-cuff presentati­ons. What matters far more is how capable he is in actually understand­ing and leading the country domestical­ly and in foreign affairs, and making difficult judgments day to day. Thus far in his term, he’s passed those tests repeatedly.

And even if he might at times be more rickety than younger leaders, it bears repeating that Biden is far saner and more responsibl­e than Trump, who has his own share of major verbal slip-ups.

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