The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

President Trump’s true 100-day achievemen­t

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In the outpouring of commentary on President Trump’s first 100 days in office, his greatest single achievemen­t is almost never mentioned: We are not talking much about whether Russia colluded with Trump’s campaign to help elect him.

Our distractio­n was not inevitable. Recall that just a little over a month ago, FBI Director James Comey told the House Intelligen­ce Committee that the bureau was investigat­ing possible cooperatio­n between Trump’s team and Russia’s hacking and disinforma­tion campaign to undercut Hillary Clinton. As The New York Times wrote, Comey’s testimony “created a treacherou­s political moment for Mr. Trump.” Yet the president slipped by.

In mid-February, the administra­tion should have come under sustained inquiry when Michael Flynn, Trump’s first national security adviser, was forced to resign because he misled White House officials about the nature of his contacts with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S.

Flynn, who had led the Republican National Convention in “Lock her up!” chants against Clinton, turned out to have received $65,000 from companies linked to Russia, and $600,000 to lobby for the Turkish government, even as he was advising Trump.

The Flynn story is obviously heating up again, but let’s pause to ponder how Trump’s genius at evasion, diversion and prevaricat­ion helped him to keep the Russia story at bay. It should disturb us more than it seems to that the 100th day of Trump’s presidency on April 29 will also mark the beginning of the ninth week since Trump sent out his March 4 tweet-to-end-all-tweets charging that “Obama had my ‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower just before the victory.”

There was no evidence then for that accusation and none now because the evidence doesn’t exist.

Trump’s gambit worked. First, Trump’s lieutenant­s got Rep. Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, involved in a Keystone Kops routine at the White House in which Nunes kind of, sort of suggested he had informatio­n giving support to Trump’s claim, which he didn’t. Nunes eventually had to recuse himself from the committee’s investigat­ion of Trump, but the whole episode may have fatally wounded — certainly delayed — its inquiry.

And there is this core Trump principle: A lie is as good as the truth as long as you can get your base to believe it. And sure enough, the new Washington Post/ABC News poll conducted last week found that by a margin of 52 percent to 32 percent, Republican­s believe that “the Obama administra­tion intentiona­lly spied on Trump and members of his campaign during the 2016 election campaign.”

Fortunatel­y, as John Adams taught us, facts are stubborn, and the Russia story cannot be suppressed forever. Indeed, there was progress on Tuesday when Reps. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and Elijah Cummings, D-Md., of the House Oversight Committee jointly asserted that Flynn may have violated the law by not fully disclosing his Russian business dealings.

At least as significan­t, both also expressed alarm at the White House’s refusal to turn over any documents on Flynn’s hiring and firing. There may be limits to Trump’s cagey sorcery.

But it’s still pretty impressive. Given the substantiv­e emptiness of Trump’s presidency so far, his greatest achievemen­t is that he is still standing there, making pronouncem­ents as if he means them and moving noisily but without any clear plan from one thing to the next.

Every day he can postpone his reckoning with Russia is a victory.

 ?? EJ Dionne Columnist ??
EJ Dionne Columnist

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