Boston Herald

Republican party now belongs to Roger Stone

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch.

Roger Stone is an infamously execrable force in American politics. Perhaps his only saving grace is that he’s not a hypocrite about it.

Stone is a proud “dirty trickster.” The GOP kept him on a leash lest his amorality be too closely associated with the Republican brand. Part of his code is that the best defense against legitimate criticism is to shoot the messenger: “Admit nothing, deny everything, launch counteratt­ack.”

As a proud cynic, Stone would probably find the very notion of legitimate criticism foolish. “Nothing is on the level,” he says.

I suspect one reason Stone has a cult following on the right and among many in the media — a fan club that predates his status as a Trump loyalist — is his willingnes­s to own his political amorality in unapologet­ic sound bites, thus immunizing himself from charges of hypocrisy. When you turn deceit and dishonor into guiding principles, the only way you can be a hypocrite is if you fail to go low enough.

But Stone’s hypocrisy exemption isn’t transferab­le. His defenders, and defenders of President Trump’s Friday-night commutatio­n of Stone’s prison sentence for seven felony counts of perjury, obstructio­n of Congress and witness tampering, won’t escape judgment for their two-faced behavior.

The three main commutatio­n defenses, all offered with Stonian shamelessn­ess, are: 1. The president has the power to do it; 2. it was warranted because Stone’s conviction was part of the “Russia hoax”; and 3. other presidents used their pardon and commutatio­n power corruptly, too.

The first defense is true as far as it goes, though it’s a straw man given that few dispute it. It also leaves out James Madison’s famous example of a non-criminal but impeachabl­e act: If “the President be connected, in any suspicious manner, with any person” he shelters from justice, Congress would be within its rights to impeach him for it.

Second, whatever you think of the Russia investigat­ion, Stone is guilty of the crimes he was tried for. Indeed, those crimes should enrage those who tout the president’s “total exoneratio­n.” If Stone believed Trump to be wholly innocent and that the Russia collusion claim was a hoax, why not fully cooperate with investigat­ors to clear the air? Moreover, why would Attorney General William Barr — vilified by the left and lionized by the right for being a Trump loyalist — oppose Stone’s commutatio­n and defend his prosecutio­n as “righteous”?

The third and most popular defense is the one that reeks of hypocrisy.

A common talking point is that Bill Clinton abused his pardon power, too. Clinton pardoned his own brother! He pardoned billionair­e fugitive and Clinton fundraiser Marc Rich.

Roger Clinton’s pardon was indeed unseemly. But unlike Stone, he had already served his full sentence. The Rich pardon was worse, but Rich was not being rewarded for his silence in an investigat­ion of the president.

And here’s the hypocrisy. The right was furious about these pardons. The GOPcontrol­led Senate held angry hearings on the Rich pardon. Newt Gingrich called it “a very profound attack on our criminal justice system.” Then-Sen. Arlen Specter suggested it was impeachabl­e, although Clinton’s presidency was virtually over.

Liberals denounced it, too.

Jimmy Carter was outraged by the Rich pardon. New York Sen. Chuck Schumer couldn’t “think of a single justificat­ion for (it).” Massachuse­tts Rep. Barney Frank called it a “real betrayal” of Clinton’s supporters. “It was contemptuo­us.”

A few on the right — including two GOP senators, Mitt Romney and Pat Toomey — have stepped up. But the majority seem not just willing but thrilled to excuse the inexcusabl­e — admitting nothing, denying everything and launching counteratt­acks.

Congratula­tions, Roger Stone: You won. It’s your party now.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States