Sessions was the master of Senate sock puppet show
Watching Attorney General Jeff Sessions confound Senate Democrats during his Intelligence Committee testimony was like watching a puppet show. Sessions was the hand. And the Democrats were the socks.
Oh, they flapped their mouths, occasionally twisting their necks, and grimaced before the TV cameras as part of their performance.
But that was about it. It is the way of things in a sock puppet show. The socks are limited. Republicans know what that’s like. They’ve played the sock puppets, too.
But on Tuesday before the Senate Intelligence Committee, it was the Democrats’ turn. They didn’t like it. But there was little they could do.
Sessions challenged them by refuting unfounded allegations that he may have colluded with the Russians in the 2016 election, invoking his honor and his service and using that Alabama drawl, and after that they couldn’t really push back.
And Democrats just sat there, turning their sock heads this way and that, moving their mouths, perplexed.
They tried pushing him on what the president told him about firing former FBI Director James Comey.
But Sessions declined to answer particulars, preferring to reserve the president’s right to perhaps later claim executive privilege.
Such confidentiality was respected by Democrats when they had the White House.
So Democrats sputtered on, some accusing Sessions of “obstruction” and “stonewalling,” though many of them are lawyers. As such, they knew there were no sharp teeth in their arguments. Then again, sock puppets have no teeth.
Democratic U.S. Sens. Martin Heinrich, Kamala Harris, Angus King and the theatrically disgusted Ron Wyden tried repeatedly to have Sessions break that confidence. He refused.
Executive privilege isn’t absolute. And it is historically a point of contention between the legislative and executive branch. But it’s been that way almost since the beginning of the republic.
The interesting thing that probably won’t make headlines was this: The Senate committee is investigating alleged collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians, but few if any questions about this were asked by Democrats.
For months and months, and 24/7 on breathless cable news networks, all we heard and read were allegations — without evidence — that Trump colluded with the Russians.
But now the Russian thing doesn’t seem to excite Democrats anymore.
They’ve moved away from collusion with Russians to process, and have pushed the obstruction of justice angle.
But what happened to the Russians and those damning emails hacked out of the Democratic National Committee — the emails that demonstrated collusion between Democrats and Beltway journalism — that so embarrassed Hillary Clinton?
That’s what Arkansas Republican Sen. Tom Cotton wanted to know.
“They’ve gone down lots of other rabbit trails, but not that question,” Cotton said.
Cotton did ask Sessions about his favorite spy fiction, John le Carre or
Jason Bourne movies, and that got a laugh.
“It’s just like ‘Through the Looking-Glass,’” Sessions said.
No, actually, it’s more like a puppet show.
And in Washington, every few years depending on who’s in and who’s out, the socks change hands.