The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Flynn plea brings holiday cheer to some, worry to others

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

At least three people must have celebrated the news that former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his conversati­on with a Russian ambassador.

First to pop a champagne cork was surely Matt Lauer, whose Icarus imitation put to shame all others recently accused of sexual misconduct in the workplace. Accused of dropping his drawers and locking unsuspecti­ng women in his office with a remote control button under his desk, America’s boy-next-door suddenly vanished from the airwaves, suffering what must have been an excruciati­ng few days of humiliatin­g ruin.

For two decades, Lauer had managed to present himself as a non-threatenin­g, essentiall­y neutered male presence on NBC’s “Today,” nabbing consequent­ial interviews and taking home around $28 million a year in exchange for never being controvers­ial. All that bottled up bad-to-the-bone-ness must have driven him to over-compensate by using his status to seduce and control at least some of the women around him.

It appears that if the viewing audience would be denied access to his inner toro, then his female minions would at least cow to his sexual fantasies. Acting out doesn’t come much plainer.

Thus, it was a source of some vicarious relief when Flynn hijacked the news cycle Friday, giving Lauer — and, presumably, all concerned — a respite from the nightmare that wasn’t just a bad dream, after all.

For different reasons, another person who might have had reason to skip along Fifth Avenue, pausing now and then for a Stoli shot and a surprising­ly well-executed pirouette, is Hillary Clinton. What irony, what glee, what perfect justice for the man who led delegates at the 2016 Republican National Convention in chanting, “Lock her up, lock her up, lock her up!” No stranger to schadenfre­ude herself, Clinton must be enjoying an extra helping of sweet revenge with her just desserts.

Indeed, as Flynn left the federal courthouse where he entered his plea, protesters could be heard calling, “Lock him up, lock him up.”

Flynn’s plea means he traded felony jail time for his cooperatio­n in helping special investigat­or Robert Mueller’s team as it continues its investigat­ion into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.

Which brings us to a third individual who must have at least allowed himself a smirk if not a smile: James Comey, whom Trump fired as FBI director, specifical­ly because of his Russia investigat­ion, by the president’s own words. Especially memorable from those first few weeks of Trump’s occupation of the White House was his February 14 meeting with Comey, during which he asked the director to consider “letting Flynn go.”

Comey subsequent­ly testified during a congressio­nal hearing that he interprete­d those words to mean that the president was pressuring him to, well, let Flynn go. It seemed obvious then — and is explicitly clear now — that the president was pressuring the head of the FBI to end his investigat­ion of the national security adviser — or else. The “else” came soon thereafter.

A relatively alert 4-year-old would have been able to deduce Trump’s meaning, even as congressio­nal Republican­s try to see other reasons for his private conversati­on with the FBI director. Do they really think that Trump was merely concerned that Flynn — a former general known for disruptive behavior — couldn’t handle the heat?

The questions raised by Flynn’s guilty plea are titillatin­g as well as disturbing: What was Trump worried about? If Trump was worried 10 months ago, by now he must be wishing he had lost the election, as he had expected. With a 60 percent disapprova­l rating, a majority of Americans apparently agree with him.

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