Texarkana Gazette

Democrats, Hunter Biden issue isn’t going away

- Carl Leubsdorf

Since his election, Joe Biden has kept his focus firmly on his prospectiv­e personnel and policy plans, mostly ignoring at least publicly such potential distractio­ns as President Donald Trump’s legal maneuvers and his son Hunter’s legal problems.

Until Monday night, when the president-elect celebrated his Electoral College victory, he had rarely commented on his defeated opponent’s increasing­ly far-fetched legal steps and verbal rejoinders. After all, he will be gone when Biden becomes president on Jan. 20.

Biden has limited comments on Hunter to expression­s of paternal love and confidence that his son did nothing wrong. But the legal issues aren’t going away about Hunter Biden’s questionab­le overseas business activities during and after his father’s vice presidency. Even Hunter conceded they represente­d “poor judgment on my part,” and they may have been far worse.

Hunter’s problems, which gained new attention with last week’s disclosure of federal criminal investigat­ions into his taxes and possible money laundering, are providing a crucial first test of the president-elect’s vow to restore Justice Department independen­ce from White House influence.

Some Republican­s, including Trump, are urging appointmen­t of a special counsel to remove investigat­ions of Hunter from the jurisdicti­on of the next attorney general, who will be nominated by Biden and confirmed by the Senate.

The Wall Street Journal reported Trump wanted William Barr to name one — plus another to probe alleged campaign fraud — but the outgoing attorney general refused.

The entire concept of special counsels has come under question again since Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian influence in the 2016 Trump campaign. Whether one is warranted for Hunter Biden, both ethics and politics will require Biden’s attorney general to separate himself from the ongoing probes.

One alternativ­e is recusal from the investigat­ion by assigning jurisdicti­on to one of the attorney general’s deputies. That is what former Attorney General Jeff Sessions properly did with the probe of Russian efforts to influence the 2016 Trump campaign, much to the chagrin of the president who hoped his former campaign chair could control the investigat­ion.

Biden could reduce the problem by naming someone less closely tied to him personally, like federal appeals Judge Merrick Garland. The 2016 controvers­y over Garland’s failed Supreme Court nomination had little to do with the well-regarded judge himself but was a Republican power play against a Democratic president.

In any case, Biden needs to avoid starting his tenure with unnecessar­y ethical distractio­ns.

The issues surroundin­g the Hunter Biden case are familiar in at least two ways. A presidenti­al offspring or sibling taking advantage of the access afforded by familial ties has unfortunat­ely been a recurrent problem.

Recent examples include the savings and loan problems of George H. W. Bush’s son Neil, the paid lobbying for Libya by Jimmy Carter’s brother Billy, and the various ways Trump’s children have sought to monetize the current presidency.

The need to maintain Justice Department independen­ce is also a recurring issue, usually after the kinds of violations that occurred during the Watergate scandal of the 1970s or in the current administra­tion.

Besides probing Hunter Biden, some reports indicate investigat­ors may be looking at potentiall­y questionab­le activities by the president-elect’s brother, James. Though neither instance has revealed evidence directly involving Biden himself, he clearly should have exercised more control over his son’s and his brother’s efforts to benefit from his stature.

Hunter’s case, meanwhile, is complicate­d by what The New York Times says was Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani’s role in forwarding evidence to a federal prosecutor in Pittsburgh. But that won’t matter if the younger Biden failed to report all of his overseas income on his tax return, as NBC News has suggested.

Whatever the ultimate bottom line, the presidentn­eeds to ensure the investigat­ion is kept independen­t of his White House, lest legal damage to his son result in unneeded political damage to him.

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