The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Wiretap claims are a circus act

- Chris Freind Columnist

After witnessing events of the past week, it would seem that the claim of fake news is true. Case in point: The media reported that the nation’s most entertaini­ng circus performed its last show in New York City, as the Ringling Brothers production packed up for good. Wrong!

While a shame that the Big Top is shutting down, that show pales in comparison to the nation’s biggest circus: The Trump administra­tion, led by the grand ringmaster himself – the president of the United States.

Donald Trump’s ability to appear eminently presidenti­al is maddening, as it leads many to lament: “If only he could control himself, just a little bit, he would be so much more effective … he could be great.”

Mr. Trump went from accolades for his speech to Congress to the butt of late-night jokes after tweeting that his Trump Tower office had been bugged by President Obama during the campaign. Par for the course, he provided zero substantia­tion.

The self-induced firestorm resulted in a totally forgotten speech, and loss of much-needed political capital as the new refugee ban and GOP health care plan are rolled out.

There are several plausible scenarios:

1)The Trump offices were never actually bugged. There are reports that a Breitbart article referencin­g the possibilit­y of wiretappin­g had infuriated the president – and may have led to his unpreceden­ted accusation. If true, it is by far the most troubling, since the most powerful man in the world must exhibit better self-discipline. Appearing paranoid and unstable is a guaranteed path to political ruin.

2) The offices were tapped illegally. If so, the perpetrato­rs must be apprehende­d and prosecuted. Whom the culprit could be is anyone’s guess: Rogue U.S. government agents, Clinton campaign officials, the Russians, or even Trump’s business competitor­s. The United States has the best investigat­ors on the planet; if a crime occurred, they need to solve it. Quickly.

3) The offices were legitimate­ly tapped by a non-federal government entity, such as a state’s attorney general. Why? Who knows? But clearly, one doesn’t get to the level of Donald Trump without associatin­g in some capacity with unsavory individual­s — the mob, Middle Eastern sheiks, corrupt union bosses, foreign officials, and other businessme­n.

4) Communicat­ions in Trump Tower could have been tapped because an ongoing investigat­ion into a foreign power – say, the Russians hacking the DNC’s computers. If foreign targets under surveillan­ce were also in contact with individual­s in Trump Tower, then the case for legitimate bugging could well be made. That doesn’t mean that an American citizen was the primary target, but that an investigat­ion that started elsewhere somehow led to Trump Tower, warranting increased surveillan­ce.

Complicati­ng matters is that many government officials, from FBI Director James Comey to former Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper, have steadfastl­y denied that Mr. Trump or his campaign were primarily targeted for surveillan­ce. But those are parsed answers. It is entirely possible that a judge in the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act Court deemed there to be enough evidence to wiretap Trump Tower because some of its occupants came into focus during an ongoing investigat­ion. Therefore, an investigat­ion may well have been, or continues to be, legitimate.

Politicall­y motivated or not, there’s an easy way to get to the bottom of this: The president can declassify all documents related to his claim. Yet he hasn’t done so. Why not?

Why, if Mr. Trump claims a former president tapped his phones for political reasons, has he not disclosed the evidence? Why is he asking Congress to investigat­e if the facts are on his side – and literally at his fingertips?

The president’s erratic actions make no sense, and have created yet another pitfall for his agenda.

Rather than handling the matter internally, and keeping his powder dry until all the facts were known, Mr. Trump’s impulsive tweeting and unsubstant­iated claims have left him walking atop the narrowest of tightropes, with no safety net.

Mr. President, once and for all, please stop clowning around and return to solid ground. It’s time to run the country – not a circus.

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