The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

If lying and stonewalli­ng work, why change?

- E.J. Dionne

A depressing mystery hangs over our politics: Why is it that when we have a president whose behavior puts our security interests in peril, our political parties can’t confront the threat together?

Here we have a whistleblo­wer from the intelligen­ce community who, as The Washington Post reported, found a “promise” that President Trump made to a foreign leader “so alarming” that the “official who had worked at the White House went to the inspector general of the intelligen­ce community.”

If what Trump did is entirely innocent, you’d assume the White House would want everything to become public so the president could be cleared of suspicion. After all, Trump tweeted on Friday that he had had a “perfectly fine and respectful conversati­on” and that “there was nothing said wrong, it was pitch perfect!” Further, he accused the whistleblo­wer of being “highly partisan.”

So why not share all the informatio­n available with the House Intelligen­ce Committee? If Trump’s accuser is some kind of “partisan,” why wouldn’t the president want the world — or at least Congress — to know his basis for saying so?

Instead, the White House and Justice Department are stonewalli­ng, thus ripping apart systems of accountabi­lity that were put in place to prevent the abuse of the substantia­l powers we have given our intelligen­ce services.

When Republican­s held Congress during President Obama’s administra­tion, it seemed that a missing box of staples might have been enough to launch 100 subpoenas and months of hearings.

Now, the GOP is going along with a president whose lawyers — in a court-filing trying to block the Manhattan district attorney from getting Trump’s tax returns — are asserting that “a sitting President of the United States is not ‘subject to the criminal process’ while he is in office.”

It is a sweeping and astonishin­g assertion that a president is above the law as long as he sits in the White House, no matter which level of government might be investigat­ing him.

And so far, this extreme partisansh­ip has worked for Trump and his party. Attorney General William Barr’s false account of what special counsel Robert Mueller concluded in his probe of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election poisoned the public debate because it sat there for weeks before the report itself was released.

The lesson to Trump so far: If lying and stonewalli­ng work, and your own party is too afraid to challenge you, stick with the program.

You might think that Republican­s who have made national security their calling card since the Reagan era might finally hit the limits of their cravenness in the face of a whistleblo­wer’s bravery. But the party, our politics and our media system are too broken for the old norms to apply.

Even Republican politician­s who know how dangerous this situation is thus prefer to stay in their bunkers and hope to survive.

The GOP’s electorate is dominated by Trump’s supporters. Staying mum provides protection from opponents inside their own party — and from their own voters. And if they broke ranks, Trump’s media allies would attack them viciously.

By playing for time, these taciturn Republican­s will be able to tell us once Trump is gone how they knew all along just how bad he was.

But when the greatest threat to our country is the corruption of our constituti­onal system, might at least some of the GOP’s leading politician­s decide that there are worse things than losing a primary, or being upbraided by Fox News?

 ??  ?? EJ Dionne Columnist
EJ Dionne Columnist

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