Texarkana Gazette

Bill Barr quit. So what finally spooked him?

- Noah Feldman

Attorney General William Barr has resigned with a little more than a month left in President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. This seems to suggest that Barr thinks what happens in the next five weeks could irretrieva­bly tarnish his legacy. If so, that’s pretty stunning, considerin­g how much Barr has already diminished his reputation and that of the Justice Department with his pro-Trump shenanigan­s.

What’s the January surprise Barr wants no part of? One possibilit­y is that Barr wants to create bureaucrat­ic distance between himself and the president so that he can say he resigned rather than serving out his term. But this seems implausibl­e, even for a canny bureaucrat­ic operator like Barr, given how close he has been to the presidency. And it certainly seems at odds with the fawning tone of his resignatio­n letter.

Another option is that Barr realizes that Trump plans to continue challengin­g the election outcome. Barr has been willing to tolerate Trump’s arguments thus far, even if he himself has refused to say that Justice has evidence of meaningful fraud. Yet the prospect of increasing­ly wild claims of conspiracy and an inaugurati­on without Trump in attendance might perhaps be enough for Barr to prefer to be out of town — and out of the administra­tion — for the next few weeks.

The most likely possibilit­y, however, involves presidenti­al pardons, and perhaps legally questionab­le executive orders designed to make more permanent some of Trump’s policies.

The president can issue pardons without the attorney general or the Department of Justice. The Constituti­on gives the pardon power to the chief executive alone. But there is a pardon office in Justice, and a president who entirely ignores or sidesteps its recommenda­tions could taint his attorney general.

Barr knows all about lateterm pardons. He made his own reputation at the end of George H.W. Bush’s administra­tion by recommendi­ng pardons for Iran-Contra figures. Those pardons effectivel­y ended the investigat­ion into the scandal — and insulated Bush, who might have been implicated had the investigat­ion continued.

Back then, Barr’s recommenda­tion for the pardon helped insulate the president from the criticism that he was being self-serving. But things would be different now.

Say Trump issues a blanket pardon for all ICE agents during his presidency. Or for his family members. Or for himself. There would be no way Barr could avoid looking like he had gone along with it — short of resigning in protest.

In other words, instead of the attorney general insulating the president by recommendi­ng pardons, the president would be discrediti­ng the attorney general by issuing outrageous pardons without the top lawyer’s consent.

Whatever Barr’s reasoning, we may not hear the full story of his resignatio­n for some time — not unless and until he decides to share it.

Barr has done lasting harm to the Department of Justice and the rule of law. His resignatio­n should not be allowed to absolve him of his efforts to enable Trump to use the once-proud department as a personal tool of partisan influence.

What Trump does next, however, might give us a hint about what spooked the man who misled the public about Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion; appointed a special counsel to investigat­e the investigat­ors of Trump-Russia collusion; and spread false claims about election fraud before the vote. It would have to be pretty bad.

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