The Arizona Republic

Let facts, not political interferen­ce, lead way to justice

- Your Turn Grant Woods Guest columnist Grant Woods is a former Arizona attorney general. Follow him on Twitter, @GrantWoods.

Sen. John McCain's moving call for a renewal of public civility embodies leadership that keeps faith not just with American ideals, but with American institutio­ns. He has set a lifelong example as a statesman who can disagree with his colleagues but revere the Senate, a senator who can oppose the foreign policy of a president and keep faith with the men and women of the military.

Sen. McCain has fought for our institutio­ns because he knows that America endures because of our institutio­ns. The Constituti­on, separation of powers, an independen­t justice system and the rule of law have always been principles, in Sen. McCain’s words, “worth the fighting.”

Today, these principles are under attack and sustaining damage that may last generation­s.

Over the past months, President Trump has repeatedly called special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion a “witch-hunt,” denigrated the Department of Justice and ridiculed the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. He and his surrogates have smeared elements of our justice system as “dishonest,” “corrupt,” and “rigged.” They have likened FBI agents to Nazi stormtroop­ers

If these attacks on our legal system continue unabated, the consequenc­es will be catastroph­ic.

All Americans should support the rule of law and the ability of critical institutio­ns — including the special counsel, the Department of Justice, and the FBI – to proceed without politiciza­tion.

No matter who you voted for, the escalating attacks on the rule of law should concern you, because the justice system in America relies on the faith of all of us.

It’s not surprising that Sen. McCain has stood up to forces seeking to erode confidence in the things that safeguard our liberty. But more leaders need to follow his lead, and more action must be taken.

We must always be a “nation of laws, not men.” That’s an ideal that separates the United States from countries led by dictators and despots. It’s an ideal that brings thousands of foreign judges, attorneys, and prosecutor­s to the United States every year to study and marvel at our system. It’s all in jeopardy today.

Ronald Reagan said “freedom is always one generation away from extinction;” so, too is public faith in our cherished institutio­ns. It’s not automatic, we have to protect it with all our might.

No one — not even the president — is above the law, and the special counsel investigat­ion must be allowed to proceed without political interferen­ce.

Let Robert Mueller finish the job that he is unquestion­ably qualified to do. Let the facts exonerate or prove wrongdoing, but don’t let political interferen­ce turn us into the kind of country where the rule of law can be dismissed.

We all are responsibl­e to stand up for our institutio­ns and ideals, and we will all be measured by whether we did so in America’s time of testing. We are living one of those moments. Insist that our elected representa­tives speak out and take action to prevent unalterabl­e damage. Congress should pass a bipartisan bill to protect the special counsel’s investigat­ion from political interferen­ce, and the Arizona congressio­nal delegation should support it. We owe that much to John McCain and the country he has served so well.

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