USA TODAY US Edition

Pretend Hillary Clinton did what Donald Trump has done

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Imagine what would have happened had a President Hillary Clinton abruptly fired the man overseeing an investigat­ion of her campaign’s ties to a hostile foreign government.

Imagine if the firing came, according to The New York Times, weeks after Clinton had asked the man to drop a probe of a close associate who had lied about conversati­ons with that nation’s ambassador.

Imagine, further, what would have happened had she invited the ambassador and foreign minister of that hostile government to the Oval Office at the request of their autocratic leader, closed the meeting to U.S. journalist­s, and claimed to have been tricked when the foreign adversary’s media arm released chummy photos.

And then imagine that she had used the meeting to share classified intelligen­ce with the envoys.

Republican­s in Congress and conservati­ve news outlets would undoubtedl­y be clamoring for investigat­ions, if not impeachmen­t. After all, Clinton’s critics spent years trying to make a capital case out of the Benghazi tragedy, then pounded her careless handling of State Department emails.

Now, many of those formerly apoplectic Republican­s are shrugging off Trump’s behavior — his campaign’s suspicious ties to the Russian government, his dis- missal of FBI Director James Comey and his sharing of classified informatio­n with two high-level Russian officials — with only a modest sense of annoyance.

Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., allowed that it would be nice to have “a little less drama” from the White House. Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., compared the Trump White House to “kiddie soccer” (an insult to youth soccer leagues). “It is what it is,” added Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.

What is it? How about a breathtaki­ng degree of presidenti­al ignorance, incompeten­ce, immaturity and impulsiven­ess? Trump’s disclosure of classified intelligen­ce would put anyone but a president in legal jeopardy. He has harmed national security by raising questions among allies about whether they should cooperate with the United States and trust America to keep secrets. And he has used the powers of the presidency to attempt to impede a credible investigat­ion into how he came to be president.

Rather than trying to make excuses for the president, the Republican­s who control Congress should be providing leadership, staying true to their oaths of office, and serving as credible checks on Trump’s excesses.

They should demand that the next FBI director be a non-partisan career profession­al, not a politician who could be co-opted by the administra­tion. They should get to the bottom of Tuesday’s report in The Times that the president asked Comey to drop an investigat­ion of former national security adviser Michael Flynn — a request that, if confirmed, smacks of the kind of obstructio­n of justice that brought down President Nixon. And they should support appointmen­t of a Justice Department special counsel.

Had Clinton been elected and done a tenth of the things Trump has done, the calls from the right for her removal would be deafening, louder even than the “lock her up” shouts during the presidenti­al campaign.

 ?? AUDE GUERRUCCI, POOL PHOTO ?? President Trump and a portrait of Hillary Clinton.
AUDE GUERRUCCI, POOL PHOTO President Trump and a portrait of Hillary Clinton.

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