Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Report in the supernova stage

- ED ROGERS

With Attorney General William Barr’s news conference Thursday and the release of the redacted special counsel report, the Russia collusion saga has reached its supernova stage.

For a while, there will be a burst of light and a swelling of attention over the report’s findings on this or that unflatteri­ng data point, but the whole sad affair is probably destined to fade. For Democrats, the question is whether they will be tempted by the ephemeral light of impeachmen­t.

The conclusion that there was neither collusion nor obstructio­n means the hopes and dreams of President Donald Trump’s critics— that he would be indicted—have reached a dead end. On Thursday, Barr said clearly that the Russians “did not have the cooperatio­n of President Trump or the Trump campaign—or the knowing assistance of any other Americans for that matter.” And on obstructio­n, he noted that “the President took no act that in fact deprived the Special Counsel of the documents and witnesses necessary to complete his investigat­ion.”

No one expects Democrats in Congress or the partisans in the media to see it that way or to accept the results of Robert Mueller’s report as final and move on. And who knows whether the president will be impeached, but their quest for collusion has been dealt its fatal blow. The shouting and posturing in the days ahead will only amount

to the president’s critics chasing their tails.

Good luck trying to sell to an already fatigued public the idea of obstructio­n of justice without an underlying crime or claiming the president tried to obstruct an investigat­ion that he had the authority to stop at any time.

It is probably too much to hope that the news media and the permanent campaign establishm­ent will move on from Mueller and Russia and talk about something else. And it is no secret that there is a substantia­l block of the angry left represente­d by Democrats in the House who want to impeach the president for something. The problem is that the “something” is still proving to be elusive.

Trump as the victim of a partisan crusade could reinforce the idea that the Democrats are obsessed with him and that they are not tending to business. It is also possible that a lot of voters think Trump is probably guilty of some type of obstructio­n but that it does not rise to the level of supporting a national distractio­n and a monthslong futile impeachmen­t process.

Support for impeachmen­t has dropped in recent months, declining from 43 percent in favor in December to 36 percent, according to a CNN poll released last month. Obviously, this polling was done before the Mueller report supernova erupted. It will be interestin­g to see if cool heads prevail among Democrats, or if they cannot resist the urge to pursue the bright light of impeachmen­t.

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