The Denver Post

Is Comey a hero or villain? That’s the wrong question.

- By Paul Waldman Paul Waldman is a senior writer at The American Prospect.

With former FBI director James Comey everywhere in the media right now, what his new book has to say about President Donald Trump is being quickly slotted into a partisan narrative. One of the consequenc­es is that his comments getting the most attention may be the least important.

There’s a better way to understand Comey: to separate the facts he relates from his opinions. The former are vital to the Russia investigat­ion and the questions it raises, including whether Trump obstructed justice. The latter are pretty much irrelevant.

But that’s not what you’d conclude from the coverage of Comey’s book rollout. Look around and you’ll see headlines like “Comey calls Trump ‘morally unfit to be president,’” “Comey compares Trump to mob boss,” or “Comey: Trump treats women like they’re ‘meat.’”

It’s not a surprise that news outlets would pick up on the most dramatic pieces of what Comey writes or what he said in his interview with ABC News.

Here’s how we locate what’s really meaningful in his account of his time as FBI director: If Comey is talking about something that happened — what transpired in a meeting, what Trump said to him, what evidence the FBI uncovered about Russia — then it’s important. If he’s saying how he felt or what he believes today, it certainly might be interestin­g to hear, but in the end it doesn’t make too much of a difference.

What Comey is telling us about what actually happened hinges on the question of whether Comey is a reliable witness. That brings us to the different ways Trump’s critics and defenders are talking about Comey right now. To hear President Trump tell it, Comey is a “Slimeball!,” “a proven LEAKER & LIAR,” “a man who always ends up badly and out of whack (he is not smart!), will go down as the WORST FBI Director in history, by far!” who “committed many crimes.” The White House is saying essentiall­y the same thing, albeit with slightly less juvenile language.

Comey says that Trump asked for his loyalty, and that he wanted him to go easy on Michael Flynn, at a moment when Trump may have known that Flynn had committed a crime by lying to the FBI. Trump says it never happened. Who do you believe?

Even liberals who will never forgive Comey for his actions during the election don’t think he’s dishonest. On the other hand, we all know that Trump is not simply a liar but is also one of history’s most profligate liars. Does that mean that we can be 100 percent sure that Trump is the one not telling the truth? No, but given who the two men are, and that Comey made notes of their conversati­ons and contempora­neously told colleagues about what had transpired between him and the president, the evidence weighs heavily in Comey’s favor.

That is, unless you believe that even at that time, Comey was thinking, “I’ll write up some fake notes of a conversati­on that never happened, then lie to other people in the FBI about it, just in case Trump ever fires me and I want to become his public antagonist.”

Even so, as Comey correctly pointed out when George Stephanopo­ulos asked him whether his conversati­ons with Trump constitute­d obstructio­n of justice, he can only provide part of the answer:

“Possibly. I mean, it’s certainly some evidence of obstructio­n of justice. It would depend and and I’m just a witness in this case, not the investigat­or or prosecutor, it would depend upon other things that reflected on his intent.”

If you believe Trump, then it doesn’t matter because the conversati­on never happened. But if you believe Comey, as I think most reasonable people would, then he has provided a set of facts that have to be dealt with — by prosecutor­s, by Congress, and by the voters. That’s true whether you think Comey is an admirable

person or not.

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