The Denver Post

Peter Strzok wrecks the GOP’s conspiracy theory

- By Paul Waldman Paul Waldman is an opinion writer for the Plum Line blog.

There are times when you watch what’s happening in American politics and come to believe you’ve fallen through the rabbit hole, to a place where everything is upside down. Thursday was one of those times, as FBI agent Peter Strzok testified in a public hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, the latest chapter in the saga of Republican attempts to prove that any and all investigat­ion into Russia’s attempt to manipulate the 2016 election and the Trump campaign’s eager cooperatio­n with that effort is a “witch hunt.”

As you know, Strzok was one of the key agents involved in investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce and, in 2017, he was assigned to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into the Russia scandal. However, when Justice Department officials saw texts he exchanged with Lisa Page — an FBI lawyer with whom he was having an affair — in which they disparaged Donald Trump, Mueller removed him from the investigat­ion. To Republican­s, those text messages are the smoking gun that proves Trump is utterly blameless and the entire investigat­ion into him was tainted from the start and must be shut down.

But there’s one very important fact that we have to keep in mind, one that Strzok made in his prepared statement today:

“In the summer of 2016, I was one of a handful of people who knew the details of Russian election interferen­ce and its possible connection­s with members of the Trump campaign. This informatio­n had the potential to derail, and quite possibly, defeat Trump. But the thought of exposing that informatio­n never crossed my mind.”

This is the core of what makes the Republican effort to discredit the Russia investigat­ion so utterly insane. They want us to believe there was an FBI conspiracy to prevent Trump from being elected president, and what did that conspiracy do? First, it mounted a cautious investigat­ion of what nearly everyone now acknowledg­es was a comprehens­ive effort by Russia to help Trump get elected, an effort that people on the Trump campaign and even in Trump’s own family tried to cooperate with. But then it kept that investigat­ion completely secret from the public, lest news of it affect the outcome of the investigat­ion in any way.

You will notice that Republican­s have not been able to produce any evidence that Strzok or anyone else took any official action that was biased, unfair or inappropri­ate in their investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce and the Trump campaign.

Even if you were to set aside the fact that the director of the FBI quite possibly threw the election to Trump when he violated FBI protocols and announced 11 days before the election that the bureau was reopening the investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s emails, the idea that the bureau attempted to hinder Trump’s election isn’t just unsupporte­d by any evidence, it is contradict­ed by everything they did.

And that’s what you have to keep in mind as you watch these ludicrous hearings, and everything else the Republican­s do with regard to this issue. They’ve proven that Strzok didn’t think highly of Trump. Fair enough. We should note, however, that while we have seen Strzok’s private text messages — because they were released by the Justice Department — we have no idea what other FBI agents were texting each other, say, about Hillary Clinton. We do know, on the other hand, that as one report said just before the election, “Deep antipathy to Hillary Clinton exists within the FBI, multiple bureau sources have told the Guardian, spurring a rapid series of leaks damaging to her campaign just days before the election.” As one agent put it at the time, “The FBI is Trumpland.”

So that’s an example in which FBI agents actually did things to help Trump during the election. But that’s not what Republican­s are investigat­ing, which might suggest — and hold on while I blow your mind — that the GOP isn’t actually concerned broadly with the integrity of FBI investigat­ions.

You don’t have to like Peter Strzok, or James Comey, or Robert Mueller, or anyone else involved in these various investigat­ions. But you have to ask, and you have to keep asking: What do Republican­s think the FBI actually did to effectuate this anti-Trump conspiracy they say existed to deny him the presidency? Because the facts, here on Planet Earth, show that they did what they were supposed to do: They began an investigat­ion into this profound threat to American democracy, but kept quiet about it so it wouldn’t affect the election.

Especially in contrast to how Clinton was treated, that was either an extraordin­ary gift to Trump, or it was them doing their jobs precisely how they should have. But it can’t be anything else. Justin Mock, Vice President of Finance and CFO; Bill Reynolds, Senior VP, Circulatio­n and Production; Bob Kinney , Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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