The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

A vision of Trump through the looking glass

- EJ Dionne Columnist

Donald Trump’s astonishin­g and reckless accusation that he was wiretapped on orders from President Obama should finally be the tipping point in how the country views him and his presidency.

Obama, through a spokesman, said the charges were “simply false.” It appears that Trump issued his wild tweet storm Saturday morning largely on the basis of reports in conspiracy­minded right-wing media.

He signaled his lack of evidence first by reportedly pushing his White House staff to ransack sensitive intelligen­ce informatio­n to find support for his claim. Then on Sunday, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Trump wanted Congress to look into the matter and that the administra­tion would offer no further comment.

Trump has a problem either way. If he was not wiretapped, he invented a spectacula­rly false charge. And if a court ordered some sort of surveillan­ce of him, on what grounds did it do so?

Every time the issue of the relationsh­ip between Trump’s apparatus and Moscow comes up, he is moved to unleash unhinged counteratt­acks. This only underscore­s how urgent it is to get to the bottom of this story quickly.

We need to understand why those in Trump’s orbit who engaged with Moscow stick with lies and misdirecti­on until the moment their falsehoods are publicly revealed. The truth has to be dragged out of them by the media, working in concert with those in government (aka “leakers”) who refuse to sit by while the system they serve is endangered.

No wonder Trump hates leakers and the press. With so many Republican­s in Congress prepared to abandon everything they said about accountabi­lity before Jan. 20, 2017, the main lines of defense against executive abuses have to come from journalist­s, those who supply them with informatio­n, and courageous judges.

The Washington Post’s revelation last week that Attorney General Jeff Sessions misled the Senate about his two meetings with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak came after Michael Flynn, Trump’s first national security adviser, lied about the nature of his own Russian contacts. Flynn stuck to false claims about his conversati­ons with Kislyak until the Post and other media blew them out of the water. Flynn had to resign.

Sessions’ convenient memory lapse (“I didn’t have — did not have communicat­ions with the Russians”) was especially jarring because it came after an inquiry from Sen. Al Franken in which the Minnesota Democrat did not even ask Sessions whether he met with Russians.

And during his news conference announcing his recusal from investigat­ions into the Russia connection — Trump, by the way, was enraged because he didn’t want Sessions to pull back — the attorney general remembered many things Kislyak had said, but used the phrase “I don’t recall” five times about various other aspects of the encounters.

The Sessions moment was followed by the confirmati­on of previously undisclose­d meetings with Kislyak, one involving Flynn and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, another with former campaign advisers Carter Page and J. D. Gordon.

The crucial issue is how all this affects our national security. But this saga also reminds us that a crowd claiming to place “America First” does not really believe its own slogan. They place only about half of America first, the part that opposed Obama and supported Trump. When it comes to the other half, they feel only contempt. This is why Russian interferen­ce in our democracy appears to matter far less to Trump than saving his own skin. It’s also why he could compare Obama unfavorabl­y to a foreign autocrat during the 2016 campaign. Trump seems to assume that the truth doesn’t matter anymore, that a leader just needs enough voters to believe the “alternativ­e facts” his side invents.

Alternativ­e facts can take you only so far. A president can’t just make up charges against his predecesso­r, call him a “Bad (or sick) guy,” and then get away with it. Can he?

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