Los Angeles Times

About Jared Kushner’s email problem...

- DOYLE McMANUS doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com Twitter: @DoyleMcMan­us

Will Democrats soon be chanting “lock them up?” Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and close advisor, disclosed through his lawyer on Sunday that he has been using personal e-mail for government business. He’s not the only one. Kushner’s emails were on a private server he shares with his wife, Ivanka Trump; she’s on the White House staff, too. Trump’s first White House chief of staff, Reince Priebus, economic advisor Gary Cohn, policy aide Stephen Miller and former advisor Stephen Bannon have all used private email for official work as well. And there may be more.

Wait: Isn’t that what Hillary Clinton did, hobbling her presidenti­al campaign? Pretty much — and Trump’s still campaignin­g on it. Only last month, complainin­g about special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, he said: “What the prosecutor­s should be looking at are Hillary Clinton’s 33,000 deleted emails.”

During the campaign, Trump and his allies insisted that Clinton’s use of a private email server was evidence that she was hiding something illicit. Now it turns out the First Family has a personal server, too. In New York, where Trump and Kushner grew up, there’s a word for that: chutzpah.

But then, this is the same Trump who criticized his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, for playing too much golf — and who, when Obama urged the Washington Redskins to change their name, said the president should butt out of sports and “focus on his job.”

Kushner’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, says it’s not as bad as it looks. (He’s a very good lawyer.) Lowell says Kushner has forwarded all the “non-personal” emails on his server to his government account, to make them part of official government records.

Lowell has not, however, responded to questions about whether any classified informatio­n made its way into Kushner’s emails or how secure the Javanka server is — two factors that were central to the charges against Clinton. Nor is it entirely clear from Lowell’s brief statement whether Kushner ever deleted emails he considered personal, another core piece of the GOP case against Clinton.

This could turn out to be a tempest in a teapot.

After all, the FBI found no evidence that Clinton had committed a crime, although thenDirect­or James Comey scolded her for being “careless.” It’s not illegal for federal officials to use private email accounts for government business as long as they make sure no classified informatio­n leaks out, and as long as they put a copy of all their messages into official records.

Kushner and his colleagues are entitled to the presumptio­n of innocence — a presumptio­n Clinton was never really given last year. Still, there’s no reason to cut Kushner much slack. He’s already compiled a record of what looks like carelessne­ss, at best.

When he joined the White House staff, he failed to disclose contacts with more than 100 foreign officials, including a secret meeting with the Russian ambassador. He had a conversati­on with the CEO of a Russian bank that was under U.S. sanctions at a time when his family real estate firm was looking desperatel­y for loans. And he attended Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with a Russian lawyer who had promised to deliver dirt on Clinton. He’s earned the scrutiny he’s getting from Mueller’s investigat­ors.

He’d better hope Mueller is more lenient than his father-in-law was toward Clinton, especially if it turns out that he discarded any messages.

“She deleted the emails,” Trump said during the campaign. “She has to go to jail.”

If Kushner has learned from Clinton’s example, he’ll want to come clean, and fast. If you want to claim you made an innocent mistake, that’s the only way to make it credible. (Clinton, who rebelled against admitting error, usually fessed up only an inch at a time.)

Kushner’s record on disclosure up to now hasn’t met that test. He acknowledg­ed his campaign and transition meetings with the Russians only after they were disclosed by others.

Meanwhile, here’s a hypocrisy test for the rest of us: If you thought Clinton’s emails were a scandal last year, can you argue now that Kushner’s private server is nobody else’s business? And if you thought Clinton’s emails were no big deal, are you willing to give the president’s son-in-law the benefit of the doubt as well?

The verdict of Richard Painter, a frequent Trump critic who was ethics chief in President George W. Bush’s White House, looks about right: “Stupid, but not criminal.” But stupidity and incompeten­ce matter. In high enough places, in large enough quantities, they can bring down a presidency.

He’d better hope Mueller is more lenient than his father-in-law was toward Clinton.

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