Los Angeles Times

Barr has more ways to politicize the Justice Department

In a Fox interview, the attorney general laid out an agenda that coincides with GOP interests.

- @HarryLitma­n HARRY LITMAN

In the friendly confines of a Fox News interview on Sunday, Atty. Gen. William Barr laid out his chief concerns and enforcemen­t priorities heading into the election.

As two career Department of Justice prosecutor­s detailed in congressio­nal hearings Wednesday, Barr has allowed improper considerat­ions — most offensivel­y, the president’s political interests — to drive enforcemen­t considerat­ions. The bill of particular­s against him includes misreprese­nting the Mueller report, seeking a lesser sentence for Roger Stone, trying to dismiss the case against Michael Flynn and firing U.S. Atty. Geoffrey Berman, who was investigat­ing Trump dealings in New York. What Barr made clear on Sunday was his willingnes­s to use the Department of Justice to interfere in the presidenti­al election on President Trump’s side, politicizi­ng voting rights and the marketplac­e of ideas on the internet.

Picking up on Trump’s bitter but unsubstant­iated criticism of Facebook, Twitter and other internet companies, Barr is determined to rattle the Justice Department’s antitrust saber at Silicon Valley, and first up is the advertisin­g and search giant Google. According to various news reports, the department is already drafting an antitrust complaint against Google and interviewi­ng lawyers to prosecute the case. That’s after only a year of investigat­ion, which is actually warp speed in terms of bringing an antitrust complaint.

Yet it’s unclear what theory the department would pursue. The Federal Trade Commission, which also has antitrust jurisdicti­on, looked closely at possible antitrust charges against Google in 2013 and concluded there was no basis to bring a case.

That’s not to say that a company the size of Google could not be the subject of an antitrust case. But the department would need to prove the company’s market power is monopolist­ic and that it has an adverse effect on consumers, such as exorbitant advertisin­g fees or a reduction in the quality of informatio­n available to consumers. As to the latter, it’s hard to see how a censorship case can be made given the innumerabl­e sources of informatio­n of all stripes that Google presents.

But the Fox interview provided a strong clue explaining the attorney general’s fixation on Silicon Valley. Powerful internet companies, said Barr, are “only presenting one viewpoint, and they can push the public in a particular direction very quickly.” Removing any doubt about which direction he had in mind, Barr endorsed an assertion made by Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare): “Conservati­ves are being censored.”

“One way that this can be addressed,” Barr went on, “is through the antitrust laws and challengin­g companies that engage in monopolist­ic practices.” In other words, the department’s antitrust prosecutor­ial powers can bring Google, et al., to heel.

The Barr-Nunes premise is fanciful. As the Economist found in two painstakin­g statistica­l reviews of Google searches, there’s no credible evidence of censorship, only stray anecdotes and phony “aha” moments from Fox commentato­rs. Moreover, there clearly is robust debate on the web.

Beyond the problem of proving adverse effects, the blunderbus­s of an antitrust prosecutio­n is an inapt remedy for perceived bias. Trying to break up Google, Facebook or Twitter, in fact, hobbles the prosecutio­n because it could give rise to a 1st Amendment defense. These internet giants could argue that if it were somehow proven that they had created politicall­y biased algorithms, it would violate the Constituti­on for the department to prosecute them on the basis of their anticonser­vative viewpoint.

Barr’s second Trumpian target for the Justice Department in coming months is even more ominous than clamping down on digital media: a threat to “tighten up” mail-in voting. Voting by mail, the attorney general said on Fox, “absolutely opens the floodgates to fraud. Those things are delivered into mailboxes. They can be taken out. There’s questions about whether or not it even denies a secret ballot.”

More fantasy. Republican and Democratic officials in about two-thirds of the states have made it easy for voters to send in ballots by mail. Safeguards such as checking voter signatures against registrati­on rolls are already in place for absentee ballots. Oregon is one of five states that holds its elections only by mail. In nearly 20 years, it has found only two cases of mail-in ballot fraud that were strong enough to gain criminal conviction­s. Two out of more than 50 million ballots cast.

In 2020 in particular, mail-in voting is perhaps the single most important device for ameliorati­ng the scandal of voters in poorer neighborho­ods having to wait on line for hours while a few miles away, in affluent neighborho­ods, mostly white voters breeze in and out. It’s a critical factor for ensuring safe voting during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Barr surely knows the real, wafer-slim record of voter fraud in this country. That he chooses to parrot myths about mail-in voting gives his game away. The GOP, which commands only a minority of American voters, seeks less, not more participat­ion at the polls. Vote-by-mail efforts, as Trump told “Fox & Friends” not long ago, could mean “you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.” Any moves by the Department of Justice to impede vote-bymail should be given their proper label: voter suppressio­n.

Barr has shown himself willing to use his vast powers in the service of the president’s political interests. So when he lays out an election-year agenda that plainly coincides with GOP interests, we should take him at his word: The Justice Department is gearing up for a battle on behalf of Trump. The conduct will be dressed up in law enforcemen­t garb, but the attorney general is being nakedly partisan.

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