Los Angeles Times

GOP’s spineless chorus

- By Matt Welch Matt Welch is editor at large of Reason, a magazine published by the libertaria­n Reason Foundation, and a contributi­ng writer to Opinion.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), the noted former litigator and poster boy for constituti­onal conservati­sm, had some stern words for the attorney general of the United States. “Predecesso­rs of yours in both parties, Democrat and Republican, when faced with serious charges of abuse of power for partisan gain,” Cruz said, “have made the right decision and appointed special prosecutor­s.”

The year was 2014. The allegation was that the Internal Revenue Service was disproport­ionately targeting tea party-affiliated groups for heightened tax-status scrutiny. And the special prosecutor — actually special counsel; the prosecutor job expired with the enabling statute back in 1999 — was never appointed. It should have been then. It should be now.

But not according to Cruz, 2017 edition. On Wednesday, the senator released a brief statement agreeing with President Trump’s sudden firing of FBI Director James B. Comey, no matter how suspicious­ly timed or absurdly justified. “Unfortunat­ely,” Cruz said, “Mr. Comey had lost the confidence of both Republican­s and Democrats, and, frankly, the American people.”

We expect that kind of ritual partisan insincerit­y from the likes of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), a serial Obama-era supporter of special counsels who sure enough responded to Trump’s ham-handed behavior by chortling hackishly about “Democratic colleagues complainin­g about the removal of an FBI director whom they themselves repeatedly and sharply criticized.”

But the tea party generation of Constituti­on-waving legislator­s, with their Federalist Papers quotations on separation of powers and Senate stemwinder­s on executive power abuse, was supposed to be different. Contemptuo­us of mindless party loyalty, uncommonly serious about the oversight function of Congress: Surely they would understand that an ongoing FBI investigat­ion into the relationsh­ip between associates of a sitting president and a foreign adversary needs to be maximally shielded from Oval Office meddling?

Think again. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), one of 31 GOP senators in 2012 to demand a special counsel to investigat­e high-profile national security leaks, is in 2017 the leading opponent of what he calls “the hysteria of a special prosecutor” regarding all things Trump-Russia. “Many of these Democrats, including Chuck Schumer, said they lost confidence in Comey a long time ago,” Paul said on Trump’s favorite morning show, “Fox & Friends,” Wednesday, echoing the administra­tion line. “They should be thanking President Trump.”

The GOP holds only a four-seat advantage in the Senate, 52-48, and more Republican senators than that have already expressed dismay at Comey’s firing. Jeff Flake of Arizona said he could not find an “acceptable rationale.” Richard Burr of North Carolina said he was “troubled by the timing and reasoning,” a sentiment seconded by Nebraska’s Ben Sasse. And Arizona’s John McCain, among others, called for the creation of a “special congressio­nal committee.”

In the near term, the most important thing that conscienti­ous senators can do is make damn sure that whoever the president appoints as the new FBI director is not some authoritar­ian-leaning political toady being rewarded for helping Trump during the campaign. In other words, not New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie or former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. Not another Jeff Sessions.

In February, Sessions sailed through confirmati­on via unanimous Republican vote, despite a long, ugly track record of opposing criminal justice reforms championed by the likes of Paul and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). Back then, Paul reasoned that, hey, Sessions agrees with the president on those issues, and therefore so would any replacemen­t nominee.

That kind of party-line deference helped bring us to where we are today. Sessions was reportedly tasked with finding a reason to fire Comey. It’s only fitting that, having gone about things backward to help his boss, Sessions’ excuse represente­d a complete reversal of Trump team arguments so far: That Comey mishandled Hillary Clinton’s email investigat­ion. For the record, the Trump campaign — including then-Sen. Sessions — praised Comey’s actions in real time last year.

Trump’s crude self-dealing, outsize ego and willingnes­s to wield state power against individual­s were hardly secrets during the presidenti­al campaign. Any politician who criticized executive-branch abuse under President Obama (and preferably President George W. Bush as well), should understand instinctiv­ely that this norm-breaking president requires more, not less, prophylact­ic restraint in the form of independen­t institutio­ns and personnel.

Valuing such protection­s does not require any belief in Russia conspiracy Twitter threads. To the contrary: Those who believe there’s no fire under the Russian smoke should want an unimpeacha­ble, nonpartisa­n source to discover and publicize that conclusion.

Paul, Cruz and Lee (who also supported Comey’s sacking) are arguably the Senate’s three most eloquent voices declaiming the legislativ­e branch’s constituti­onal abdication in making war, surveillan­ce policy and even budgets. They are right about this, and they were right in demanding more investigat­ive independen­ce in the Obama administra­tion. Here’s hoping they extend the discourtes­y to Trump.

A norm-breaking president requires more, not less, restraint.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? JAMES COMEY’S actions were praised by the Trump campaign.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press JAMES COMEY’S actions were praised by the Trump campaign.

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