Las Vegas Review-Journal

There’s no ‘double standard’ for Donald Trump’s case

Former president calls for a new election? Wrong!

- CLARENCE PAGE COMMENTARY Contact Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

WHEN Sen. Lindsey Graham warned that there would be “riots in the streets” if Donald Trump is prosecuted for his handling of classified documents, I wondered what the South Carolina Republican was up to.

Was this a prediction, suitable for a political pundit? Or was it a threat reminiscen­t of a mob boss?

Either way, it appeared to be approved by his party’s de facto big boss, former President Trump, who immediatel­y retweeted Graham’s sentiments on Trump’s financiall­y challenged social media platform, Truth Social.

Graham twice made a “riots in the street” reference on Fox News’ “Sunday Night in America” as he charged a “double standard” in the FBI’S court-approved search of Trump’s Mar-a-lago home in Florida.

Repeating an often-heard Republican charge, Graham compared the Mar-a-lago search to the FBI probes of Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of state and President Joe Biden’s son Hunter, who is under investigat­ion for tax liabilitie­s. Republican­s have called for that FBI case to be expanded into Biden’s overseas business dealings.

“And I’ll say this,” Graham added, “if there is a prosecutio­n of Donald Trump for mishandlin­g classified informatio­n after the Clinton debacle … there will be riots in the street.”

Oh? My antenna perked up at the mention of riots. As a cub reporter in the politicall­y tense 1960s, when more than 110 riots erupted in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Detroit and other cities across the nation, I was warned sternly by my editors to avoid quoting prediction­s of riots. There would be more than enough to report if such mayhem actually happened, which it too often did. No need to encourage it.

Yet, with memories of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack by Trump’s “Stop the Steal” supporters, encouragem­ent seemed no longer to be off the table for the former president.

The next morning, Trump was back to claiming falsely in uppercase and lowercase that he would have “easily won” if not for “massive FRAUD & ELECTION INTERFEREN­CE at a level never seen before in our Country.”

Fact check: More than 60 court cases, including some tried by Trump-appointed judges, found otherwise.

Yet, the former and twice-impeached president proposed a “REMEDY” in two Monday posts: “Declare the rightful winner or — and this would be the minimal solution — declare the 2020 Election irreparabl­y compromise­d and have a new Election, immediatel­y!”

Well, don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen. After almost 22 months of trying to buck the system, he still doesn’t sound like he understand­s how the system works.

Maybe he’s still relying on what President Biden calls “ultra-maga” forces to rise up and install him in office. Maybe he should go over to the District of Columbia federal court where more than 900 defendants are being tried for participat­ing in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

When one defense attorney in February said his client believed Trump could authorize overturnin­g an election, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, the chief federal jurist for D.C., responded that a president who could do that would be no different from “a king or a dictator,” and “that is not how we operate here.”

Well said. If Trump is too full of resentment to know that, Graham, a retired

Air Force lawyer, certainly should. Yet, like too many other leading Republican­s, he’s willing to tap the rage that the FBI search of Trump’s compound ignited.

A look at the polls offers clues as to why. Trump’s poll ratings, which softened enough to look encouragin­g for potential 2024 rivals such as Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, suddenly strengthen­ed after news of the FBI search was released — by Trump himself.

The speed with which most Republican­s still circle their wagons around Trump helps to explain why Graham seems so eager to jump out in front of the former president’s herd of defenders.

But I couldn’t help but wonder, as I often did after the Jan. 6 attack, how lawand-order defenders such as Graham would have responded if those had been supporters of Democrat Barack Obama storming the Capitol.

We shouldn’t have to guess. “Equal justice under law,” which is engraved over the entrance to the Supreme Court, is a principle that is not always easy to follow, but the future of our republic depends on it, regardless of which party is in charge.

 ?? Lynn Sladky The Associated Press ?? A gate is closed at the entrance to former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-lago estate in Palm Beach,, Fla., after the FBI conducted a search there in August involving classified documents.
Lynn Sladky The Associated Press A gate is closed at the entrance to former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-lago estate in Palm Beach,, Fla., after the FBI conducted a search there in August involving classified documents.
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