The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Garland lets domestic terrorists know there’s new sheriff in town

- Dana Milbank

Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, was one of those most responsibl­e for the Capitol insurrecti­on on Jan. 6, which resulted in the deaths of three police officers and the injuries of

140 others.

And now, he has the gall to claim he stands with the police.

On Monday, questionin­g attorney general nominee Merrick Garland, Hawley declared that a months-long increase in crime has been accompanie­d by “increasing calls by some activists, including members of the United States Congress, to ‘defund the police.’ “Hawley, informing Garland that such calls send “the wrong message to law enforcemen­t” and make them feel “under siege,” demanded Garland “tell me your position on defunding the police.”

Garland, who prosecuted the Oklahoma City bombing perpetrato­rs before becoming a federal judge, fixed a steady gaze on Hawley. “As you no doubt know, President Biden has said he does not support defunding the police, and neither do I,” he said. “We saw how difficult the lives of police officers were in the body-cam videos we saw when they were defending the Capitol.”

But Hawley didn’t want to talk about the violence against police generated by his own attempt to overturn the election. He insisted that Garland talk about “assaults on federal property in places other than Washington” -- specifical­ly, during racial-justice protests -- and whether those qualify as “domestic terrorism.”

Garland was not distracted by the seditionis­t’s sleight of hand. He explained that using violence “to disrupt democratic processes” (as occurred in the Capitol) is domestic terrorism, while attacking a courthouse at night (as occurred in Portland) is not. “Both are criminal, but one is a core attack on our democratic institutio­ns.”

It was a clear message to the violent white supremacis­ts and other domestic terrorists who thrived during the Trump years, most visibly in their attack on the Capitol last month: There’s a new sheriff in town. Garland vowed that domestic terrorism “will be my first priority” as attorney general and promised to “do everything in the power of the Justice Department” to stop it.

For four years, President Donald Trump railed about “law and order” while breaking the former and underminin­g the latter. In Garland, we see a restoratio­n of actual law and order. Timothy McVeigh’s prosecutor has the backing of groups such as the Fraternal Order of Police, but he’s also determined to fight discrimina­tion, as he explained during Monday’s hearing.

“I come from a family,” Garland said, his voice breaking, “where my grandparen­ts fled antisemiti­sm and persecutio­n. The country took us in -- and protected us.” With difficulty, he continued: “And I feel an obligation to the country to pay back, and this is the highest, best use of my own set of skills to pay back.”

Republican­s shamefully denied Garland a hearing for nearly a year after President Barack Obama nominated him to the Supreme Court in 2016. It is testimony to the resilience of both Garland and the sorely tested institutio­ns of government that he’s now poised to become the nation’s top law enforcemen­t officer. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and even Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., signaled their support on Monday.

But the lineup of questioner­s facing Garland made it clear how fragile the restoratio­n of the democratic order is. On the Judiciary Committee sit three senators who supported overturnin­g the election, and others vying to win over Trump supporters for 2024 presidenti­al runs.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., who last week fled to the Ritz Carlton in Cancún while his constituen­ts suffered without heat and water, took another trip Monday -back in time. He quizzed Garland about Operation Fast and Furious (2009), the Internal Revenue Service “targeting” of tea-party groups (2010) and a charge that the Justice Department was “weaponizin­g oppo research from Hillary Clinton’s campaign” (2016).

And Hawley thought it necessary to ask the former chief judge on the second highest court in the land if he would “resist calls to politicize the Department of Justice.”

Garland replied calmly that, after 24 years on the bench, “I’ve grown pretty immune to any kind of pressure other than the pressure to do the right thing given the facts and the law.”

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