Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP complicit in slandering FBI

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Aforeign power interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election. U.S. law enforcemen­t is trying to get to the bottom of that story. Congress should be doing everything possible to make sure the investigat­ion can take place. Instead, to protect their party’s president, who may or may not be complicit, Republican leaders in Congress are allowing and encouragin­g the baseless slander of the investigat­ors.

It is a new low for the leadership, one that could do lasting harm to the nation. Cravenness in the Republican leaders’ response to Donald Trump is nothing new. During the presidenti­al campaign, few stood up to his nativism and ugly ethnic slurs. Since he became president, even fewer have stood by their previous commitment­s to U.S. leadership abroad and fiscal responsibi­lity at home. As he has trampled longestabl­ished norms, such as releasing annual tax returns, we’ve heard not a peep from the Article I branch.

But this moment is different. Republican­s have embarked on a smear campaign of the FBI that can end only in a dangerous erosion of trust in law enforcemen­t, the subjugatio­n of law enforcemen­t to partisan interests or both. For Republican leaders — House Speaker Paul Ryan, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn, Vice Chairman of the Senate Republican Conference Roy Blunt — to remain silent is to be complicit.

These men could, tomorrow, end this nonsense of secret societies, phony memos and missing text messages and let profession­als such as special counsel Robert Mueller do their jobs. Instead, they are allowing Fox News personalit­ies, the president and loose cannons such as House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes and Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Ron Johnson turn the United States into a country where law enforcemen­t becomes another pawn in the partisan war.

Johnson irresponsi­bly recycles nonsense about corruption “at the highest levels of the FBI,” offering no evidence because of course there is none. Nunes abuses his access to classified informatio­n as Intelligen­ce Committee chairman, a title Ryan long ago should have revoked, to manufactur­e dark conspiraci­es.

… These men are destroying something that won’t be easily recovered: faith in the idea of impartial law enforcemen­t. It amounts to an assault on the rule of law. Trump openly wishes for an attorney general who will protect him, asks law enforcemen­t officials whom they voted for, and fires or attempts to fire those he deems disloyal. He does not believe that FBI agents or anyone else is motivated by public-spiritedne­ss or respect for the law, only by self-interest and personal loyalty to his or some other clan. If Ryan, McConnell and others continue in their acquiescen­ce, Trump’s cynical view may come closer to reality.

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