The Oklahoman

A different form of collusion

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As the likelihood that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia seems headed toward zero, the likelihood of proof of a different form of collusion seems headed upward toward certainty.

The Russia collusion charge had some initial credibilit­y because of businessma­n Donald Trump’s dealings in Russia and candidate Trump’s off-putting praise of Vladimir Putin.

It was fueled by breathless media coverage of such trivial events as Jeff Sessions’ conversati­on with the Russian ambassador at a Washington reception— and, of course, by the appointmen­t of former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel. But Mueller’s prosecutio­ns of Trump campaign operatives were for misdeeds long before the campaign, and his indictment of 13 Russians specified that no American was a “knowing participan­t” in their work.

Meanwhile, the evidence builds of collusion by Obama administra­tion law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce personnel in trying to elect Hillary Clinton and defeat and delegitimi­ze Trump in and after the 2016 election.

The investigat­ion of Clinton’s illegal email system was conducted with kid gloves. FBI Director James Comey accepted Attorney General Loretta Lynch’s order to call it a “matter” rather than an “investigat­ion.” Clinton aides were allowed to keep her emails and destroy 30,000 of them, plus cellphones. They were not subject to grand jury subpoenas, and a potential co-defendant was allowed to claim attorney-client privilege.

Lynch supposedly left the decision on prosecutio­n to Comey, who on July 5, 2016, announced publicly that Clinton had been “extremely careless” but lacked intent to violate the law, even though the statute punishes such violations whether they are intentiona­l or not.

Contrast that with the collusion of Obama officials with the Clinton campaign-financed Christophe Steele/Fusion GPS dossier alleging Trump ties with Russians. Comey and the Justice Department used it, without divulging who paid for it, to get a FISA warrant to surveil former Trump campaign operative Carter Page’s future and past communicat­ions.

Similarly, when Comey informed Trump in January 2017 of the contents of the then-unpublishe­d Steele dossier, he didn’t reveal that the Clinton campaign had paid for it.

In any case, after he was fired, he immediatel­y sent four of his internal memos, at least one of them classified, to a law professor friend to leak them to the press, with the intent of getting a special counsel appointed— who turned out to be his longtime friend and ally Robert Mueller. Collusion, anyone?

Collusion can get complicate­d and sometimes fails to produce the intended results. Comey’s deputy FBI director, Andrew McCabe, reportedly kept to himself for weeks the discovery that Clinton emails had been transmitte­d over the home computer of her aide Huma Abedin’s then-husband, the disgraced ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner. After Comey learned of this, he made his Oct. 28 announceme­nt that the Clinton email investigat­ion was being reopened.

Longtime Clinton friend Lanny Davis charges that Comey’s statement was responsibl­e for Clinton’s defeat, and Comey, on his book tour, admitted he may have made it only because he assumed Clinton would win.

Davis may be right, though no one can prove it. But one could also say the Democratic Party lost the presidency because it nominated a candidate under investigat­ion for committing a felony. And it seems as certain as these things can be that if Hillary Clinton had followed the law and regulation­s, there would be today no President Trump, no Attorney General Sessions, no EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, no Justice Neil Gorsuch.

The blame ultimately belongs to Barack Obama, who knew of Clinton’s private email system and who could have ordered her to follow the law. But that’s one bit of collusion that didn’t occur.

 ?? Michael Barone
mbarone@ washington examiner.com ??
Michael Barone mbarone@ washington examiner.com

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