The Columbus Dispatch

S.C. Rep. is one candid Republican

- The Washington Post

There is at least one senior Republican with enough decency to admit the obvious. On Fox News on Tuesday, Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., chairman of the House Oversight Committee, forcefully rebuked President Donald Trump’s baseless and dangerous claim that the Obama administra­tion improperly implanted a “spy” into his 2016 campaign.

In so doing, Gowdy underscore­d the cowardice of the many other Republican­s who stand by while the president shreds the FBI’s reputation for political gain.

“President Trump himself in the Comey memos said if anyone connected with my campaign was working with Russia, I want you to investigat­e it, and it sounds to me like that is exactly what the FBI did,” Gowdy said. “I am even more convinced that the FBI did exactly what my fellow citizens would want them to do when they got the informatio­n they got.”

Gowdy is one of a few people who would know. He received a classified Justice Department briefing last week on an informant who contacted members of Trump’s campaign in 2016, as the FBI investigat­ed Russian election meddling. The Oversight Committee chairman’s conclusion­s corroborat­e those of senior Democrats who were also briefed — which shows that this is not a case of two competing partisan narratives but of truth vs. fiction.

Trump should admit that he has no evidence substantia­ting his repeated insistence that his campaign was spied on for partisan purposes. Instead, he has doubled down, as with his previous false claim that President Barack Obama had Trump Tower wiretapped. He has tweeted about spies “all over my campaign” and tried to establish the term “spygate” to refer to his fake controvers­y.

In an interview with The Post, Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer, said the president is attacking the Justice Department because it is “working.” He also indicated that the president would not sit down with special counsel Robert Mueller unless Trump’s defense team was permitted to review classified documents on the informant.

That would set a dangerous precedent, improperly offering defense attorneys a look into an ongoing investigat­ion. It also would signal even more strongly than before that confidenti­al government sources in a politicall­y charged case risk having their identities disclosed.

Republican­s who have remained quiet as Trump has raged can tell themselves that public rebukes will not change the president’s behavior. But that logic is ultimately selfdefeat­ing. Without public pushback from GOP leaders, Republican­s will fall in line behind their president, and Americans will be left with the impression that Trump’s relentless manipulati­on is a case of he-said, she-said, with merit on both sides.

That is bad for the GOP, as the party becomes ever more in thrall to lies and distortion­s. It is bad for the country, as the president intentiona­lly tarnishes the FBI and other key institutio­ns. And it is bad for Republican leaders themselves, whom history will remember as moral weaklings in the face of a president who assaulted democratic institutio­ns.

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