Chattanooga Times Free Press

MCCARTHY REVEALS HOW THE MAGA HOUSE WILL PROTECT TRUMP

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Donald Trump has long excelled at the art of blithely revealing his corrupt designs in public, and at a rally in September, he openly signaled that he fully expected Republican­s elected to Congress to thwart the ongoing criminal investigat­ions into, well, himself.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, it turns out, seems eager to honor his end of this corrupt bargain. Or at least the California Republican will go through the motions of honoring it — and given the realities of the right-wing informatio­n universe, that might do more for the former president than one might expect.

The rules approved by the House Monday created a select committee on the “weaponizat­ion of the federal government,” to be chaired by Trumpist Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. The committee would have the authority to examine the executive branch’s collection of informatio­n on U.S. citizens, including during “ongoing criminal investigat­ions.”

As speaker, McCarthy has already declared that the GOP-controlled House will target the “weaponizat­ion of the FBI.” When the FBI executed a lawful search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, Republican­s treated it as a historic abuse of power, so there’s little doubt the committee will target criminal investigat­ions into Trump.

For decades, through Republican and Democratic administra­tions alike, the Justice Department has resisted congressio­nal oversight of ongoing criminal investigat­ions.

There are reasons for this. Revealing sensitive informatio­n could mean disclosure­s that are unfair to defendants or tip off targets and others about the direction of investigat­ions, compromisi­ng them.

So the GOP push to pry open these investigat­ions could get tied up in litigation, and courts may not let it get far. But that might not matter: Provoking the department into strenuousl­y resisting oversight might be the whole point.

That resistance could serve as grist for Republican­s and their allies in the right-wing media to scream “coverup” and paint investigat­ions as corrupt.

Democrats are also girding for coordinati­on between congressio­nal Republican­s and Trump’s lawyers. Rep. Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif., the former chair of the Intelligen­ce Committee, notes that during previous investigat­ions into Trump — over Russian interferen­ce and the strong-arming of Ukraine — Republican­s functioned as “surrogates for the Trump defense team.”

“Whatever we uncovered during those investigat­ions would immediatel­y make its way to Trump and his criminal lawyers,” Schiff told me. “I fear we’re going to see more of the same.”

The new GOP select committee will also be authorized to receive informatio­n available to the Intelligen­ce Committee. This, too, could prove insidiousl­y destructiv­e.

Here’s how: While the noise in our politics obscures this, much real government work gets done quietly behind the scenes, such as informatio­n sharing between intelligen­ce agencies and lawmakers in both parties conducted voluntaril­y and in good faith. That could be imperiled by bad GOP actors leaking informatio­n to fuel deep state conspiracy theories.

You cannot overstate the importance of spectacle to the MAGA right’s overall political project. Much of what this new committee does will be designed to create mere impression­s of coverups, of wrongdoing­s, of all sorts of shady deep state conspiraci­es.

That will create immense challenges for the mainstream news media, which could feel obliged to treat these GOP efforts as serious “counter-investigat­ions” into what has already been revealed about Trump. This will give them a sheen of legitimacy even before they’ve earned it. But there’s no reason to grant that presumptio­n, given the long trail of flagrant abuses of the public trust we’ve already seen from them.

 ?? ?? Greg Sargent
Greg Sargent

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