Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Press shouldn’t be scared of story

- Jonah Goldberg Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Much of the mainstream media refuses to cover the substance of the Hunter Biden laptop story. I think this is more defensible than Trump world claims. President Trump says journalist­s who don’t cover it are “criminals,” which is criminally stupid. Still, I think the press shouldn’t be so scared to deal with the story on its merits.

So here is what’s happened to this point. Less-than-scrupulous Trump allies Rudy Giuliani and Steve Bannon claimed to have obtained a copy of Hunter Biden’s laptop hard drive froma repair shop and gave it to the New York Post. The Post ran with the story without, inmy opinion, doing the due diligence to confirm the material provided. Indeed, the provenance of the laptop is so sketchy, replete with changing or conflictin­g stories fromthe shop and Giuliani, that the lead author of the story refused to put his byline on it. Fox News initially declined to run it because of the very real possibilit­y it’s part of a disinforma­tion campaign.

As of now, it appears that at least some of the contents of the hard drive copy are genuine. It’s impossible to know yet whether they’ve been “salted” with disinforma­tion— a commonprac­tice in Russian hacking operations used by the sorts of people Giuliani has associated with. If the copy doesn’t match the actual laptop in the FBI’s possession, or if the FBI uncovers skulldugge­ry, Giuliani, Bannon and the Post will have much to answer for.

But nowthe story is out there. And between those on one side echoing Trump’s claim that it proves the Bidens are an “organized crime family” and those on the other side— the Biden campaign, much of the media— pretending the story doesn’t exist, it’s worth cutting through the hyperbole to ask, “What if it’s all real?”

The emails on the hard drive— and other evidence— appear to support what we’ve long known: Hunter Biden traded on his last name tomake money. We already knew that Hunter had obtained a lucrative gig on the board of the Ukrainian energy firm Bur is ma when his father was vice president. The emails seem to show he tried to do the same in China. This stuff is sleazy, even if you look at Hunter’s qualificat­ions in the most positive light possible and credit Joe’s unlikely claims that he knew nothing about it.

But there’s no evidence yet that Joe Biden himself steered government policy in exchange for his son’s compensati­on, never mind took money himself.

Lastweek, the Trump campaign claimed to have found a smoking gun. An email seems to show Hunter was working to land a big stake in a Chinese firmand that a chunk of equity would be reserved for “the big guy ,” which Tony Bo bu lin ski, a former Hunter Biden associate, says is a reference to Joe Biden. A subsequent Bobulinski text message obtained by Fox News seems to support this.

That sounds bad. But even if true, it’s not nearly the massive “influence peddling” scandal the president and his supporters constantly claim. Why not? Because the email and text in question are from2017, when the vice president was Mike Pence.

It’s bad that somany former government officials trade their names and experience to get rich taking money from foreign businesses, particular­ly ones linked to oppressive government­s. That’s a common tale. But there’s no evidence yet that Joe Biden actually did that. Even if he had, what influence would he be peddling? Dowe think Biden had major pull inside the Trump administra­tion?

Moreover, Trump and his family are taking money from businesses in foreign countries now. Trump has even admitted he has a conflict of interest in Turkey because of his business dealings there.

When Trump leaves office, Iwill be delighted if he and his children follow a higher standard than the Bidens did— or even higher standard than the Trump family is following right now.

If the press wasn’t so scared of changing the trajectory of the race or doing the bidding of the Trump campaign, the laptop scandal probably would have fizzled by now. Conversely, if the Post showed more skepticism, there might not be any scandal at all.

Eitherway, we’d all be better off if the media worried less about how revelation­s might affect politics and concentrat­ed on the truth and relevance of the revelation­s themselves.

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