Los Angeles Times

Adam Schiff ’s plain speaking elevated the Mueller hearings

- VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN Twitter: @page88

During the House Judiciary Committee’s hearing on Wednesday morning, Republican­s badgered Robert S. Mueller III with sticky names that they often mispronoun­ced.

Joseph Mifsud. Natalia Veselnitsk­aya. Peter Strzok. The special counsel’s investigat­ion, they bellowed, was somehow illintenti­oned. Mueller looked at them blankly.

The Democrats, meanwhile, mansplaine­d the Mueller report to the man who oversaw it, often reading it aloud and waiting for him to nod and say, “True.”

If Republican­s were speaking only to President Trump, Democrats seemed to be speaking straight to MSNBC bookers.

And then came the afternoon session and Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank). As chair of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, Schiff presided over the second congressio­nal hearing with Mueller. His opening remarks, both plainspoke­n and magisteria­l, pierced the clouds and cacophony of the morning session.

Schiff ’s statement might be called “Disloyalty, Greed and Lies.” It scorchingl­y outlined President Trump’s three-way betrayal of his country and the American people. But because the remarks just as convincing­ly demonstrat­ed the contrast between Schiff and the president, let’s borrow other words from the statement and call it “The Very Obligation of Citizenshi­p.”

With discipline­d pathos, rejection of pretense, and Lincolnian incantatio­ns, Schiff drew out the profound moral implicatio­ns of the Mueller report. What Schiff said belongs in anthologie­s of American oratory, alongside President Kennedy’s moonshot speech and Shirley Chisholm’s 1970 “For the Equal Rights Amendment” address.

Schiff ’s remarks were all the more impressive because he had a tight needle to thread. He needed to spell out what was at stake in the report’s findings without twisting the facts or coercing Mueller toward conclusion­s that weren’t his own. What he delivered was a clarion call to political arms, a fierce reminder to all Americans of our baseline moral commitment­s. But low-key. Schiff is measured and lawyerly, and broad emotionali­sm is not his style.

As Schiff said, he understood that the two-year investigat­ion couldn’t establish criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Russians. But then he took a surprising turn: Disloyalty to country was “something worse” than a crime, and Mueller’s team amply establishe­d it.

“A crime is the violation of a law written by Congress,” Schiff intoned, “but disloyalty to country violates the very obligation of citizenshi­p, our devotion to a core principle on which our nation was founded, that we, the people, not some foreign power that wishes us ill, we decide who shall govern us.”

“Core principles” are routinely cited in cornier political speeches — but never to better effect. When it came time for Schiff to question Mueller, the pair were effective as scene partners not because they excel at stagecraft or sound bites but because they share a commitment to the material. The lifelong Democrat and the lifelong Republican both actually care about the emergencie­s and attacks spelled out in the Mueller report. Much more than they care about showboatin­g. Imagine that.

With Trump courting more foreign interventi­on in the 2020 election, even from a hostile power like Russia, Schiff and Mueller also seem to recognize that the clock is running out on American democracy.

In long-ago 2016, Schiff and California Sen. Dianne Feinstein defied the ominous silence of both parties on Russian election interferen­ce. It was just weeks before the November vote. “Based on briefings we have received,” they revealed in a cowritten letter, “we have concluded that the Russian intelligen­ce agencies are making a serious and concerted effort to influence the U.S. election.”

Their only mistake was in expecting that, as they put it, “all Americans will stand together and reject the Russian effort.”

We didn’t. The candidate of one major party — Trump — rolled out the red carpet for the Russian attack. The other party stood idly by, with most in the executive branch and legislatur­e inexplicab­ly caving to Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who refused to issue a bipartisan condemnati­on of the attacks.

As if to underline what Schiff as interlocut­or and Mueller as witness made clear on Wednesday, two deeply unsettling events occurred the very next day.

The Senate Intelligen­ce Committee published its conclusion­s about foreign interferen­ce in 2016 election: The attacks were even more systematic and sweeping than we knew. Election systems in all 50 states were targeted by Russia in hacks that went mostly undetected.

Then McConnell kept two House measures from a vote in the Senate. The bills would have secured voting systems state by state, instituted paper ballots and required campaigns to alert federal authoritie­s if offered aid from foreign government­s.

We have massive and irrefutabl­e evidence of Russian interferen­ce in American politics, and it’s going on, as Mueller told Congress on Wednesday, “as we sit here.” But on Thursday, the response from the Trump syndicate was crickets, or “something worse.”

The Mueller report “laid out multiple offers of Russian help to the Trump campaign,” Schiff told us in “The Very Obligation of Citizenshi­p,” along with “the campaign’s acceptance of that help, and overt acts in furtheranc­e of Russian help.”

He went on to say: “To most Americans that is the very definition of collusion.” QED.

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