New York Post

Criminal Fantasies

Dems’ ahistorica­l and illogical Trump hysteria

- rich lowry Twitter: @RichLowry

NO matter the criticisms directed his way by Republican­s, Robert Mueller should count himself lucky: He’s not Ken Starr. The punctiliou­s, mild-mannered independen­t counsel appointed by a three-judge panel in the 1990s, Starr investigat­ed all manner of Bill Clinton scandals, most spectacula­rly the Monica Lewinsky affair.

A former DC circuit judge and US solicitor general in the first Bush administra­tion, he’d struck no one prior to his appointmen­t as a goosestepp­ing lieutenant in the sex police, or a partisan fanatic likely to be driven by sheer hatred to destroy a Democratic president.

Starr became all of these things for Clinton’s defenders, who thought a good offense was the best defense of a president caught lying under oath.

A former Clinton advisor said his investigat­ion “smacks of Gestapo” and “outstrips McCarthyis­m.” The estimable historian Garry Wills mused that it shouldn’t be Clinton, but Ken Starr who should be impeached. Anthony Lewis, a liberal lion at The New York Times, opined that Starr’s “abuses were driven by an obsessive — and, for a prosecutor, entirely inappropri­ate — determinat­ion to force President Clinton from office by any means available.”

On and on it went. It was trench warfare over Starr’s every move. In a signature piece of writing during the Lewinsky scandal, Times columnist Maureen Dowd managed to portray Starr, not Clinton, as the sex-obsessed goat, even though the former judge wasn’t the one chasing interns around his desk.

This history is relevant because it shows the forgetfuln­ess of Trump’s critics, who seem to believe that it’s unpreceden­ted for a special counsel to attract the ire of a president’s defenders. In an often abnormal time, the most normal thing that’s happened over the last six months is that attitudes toward the Mueller investigat­ion have broken down along partisan lines.

Mueller may be motivated by a disinteres­ted pursuit of the truth (tempered, one hopes, by an appropriat­e sense of limits), but his most ardent fans are rooting for any criminal infraction that, in their fevered dreams, will lead to President Trump getting frog-marched from the White House.

The persistent fantasy that Trump can somehow be leveraged from office is behind the push to criminaliz­e any blameworth­y conduct on his part or that of his associates.

It wasn’t just bad form in pursuit of a foolish policy for incoming national-security adviser Michael Flynn to talk to Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak about sanctions; it was a violation of the Logan Act.

Don Jr.’s notorious meeting with Russians wasn’t just amateurish and ill-considered; it was a violation of a law against taking an inkind contributi­on from a foreign national.

The continued operation of Trump businesses isn’t just unseemly; it’s a violation of the Emoluments Clause.

Trump’s withdrawn directive to fire Mueller wasn’t merely a potentiall­y catastroph­ic decision that he got talked out of; it was evidence of obstructio­n of justice.

Very little can’t be made to fit under this rubric. In his rebuttal to the Nunes memo, New York Democrat Jerry Nadler alleged that the document made Republican­s an accessory to a crime — “part and parcel” of Trump’s effort “to obstruct the Special Counsel’s investigat­ion.”

Even in the worst case for Trump, Mueller is unlikely to charge him with a crime. There is longstandi­ng Office of Legal Counsel guidance that it’s unconstitu­tional to indict a president while he’s in office. The worst case for Trump is probably a report by Mueller that could become, in effect, an impeachmen­t referral.

Much will depend on the facts; on whether Mueller is willing to stand aside if he doesn’t find anything to justify his continued investigat­ion; and on who wins Congress this year — and, if the Democrats, by how much. But there can be little doubt that, in their hearts, most Democrats have decided for impeachmen­t. The fighting now may be mere skirmishin­g compared to the larger political war to come.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States