Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The beat goes on

Trump’s firing of Comey does not end any investigat­ion

- Jay Ambrose Jay Ambrose is a columnist for Tribune News Service (speaktojay@aol.com).

Donald Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey was aimed at thwarting an investigat­ion into the president possibly colluding with Russians to defeat Hillary Clinton in the past election, say hypocritic­al Democrats with applause from others. It’s a nonsensica­l thesis. The firing will intensify the investigat­ion, and not just because any tricks would immediatel­y result in calls for impeachmen­t.

After all, career prosecutor­s and investigat­ive agencies did not lose their jobs. They are honest people who want to do the right thing, they know everyone will be watching what happens and their superiors would be downright foolish to rush in with interventi­ons.

In Washington, with an issue as fiery as this one, the truth would get out and the repercussi­ons would be fierce.

The firing actually makes Trump’s situation tougher than it otherwise would have been.

Should the FBI find no evidence of collusion — and so far, there is none that has seen daylight — wide swathes of doubters would be that much more likely to insist a whole lot of lying is going on.

It’s interestin­g, of course, that the very same people who have been castigatin­g Mr. Comey daily and often arguing he ought to go are the ones now saying, oh, dear, why would anyone do this vile thing.

The answer is that Mr. Trump has the precise reasoning of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, an expert legal hand applauded on both sides of the aisle as a man of unimpeacha­ble integrity.

In a letter quickly sent Trump’s way, he wrote that Mr. Comey broke with the clear meaning of the law by deciding himself not to prosecute Ms. Clinton for her email transgress­ions as secretary of state. It was particular­ly objectiona­ble that he held a press conference to discuss the case.

Then, he was at it again when he said in a letter to Congress that he was starting up the investigat­ion once more.

In short, Mr. Rosenstein said, Mr. Comey had made it impossible for the FBI to be a trusted agency as long as he was in charge.

But wait, anti-Trump zealots say, the timing of the firing is what was awful.

We right now have grand jury proceeding­s about Russian money having been given to Michael Flynn, for a short period Mr. Trump’s national security adviser, and the FBI is probing how Russia might have influenced the 2016 election.

The obvious answer is that the timing was absolutely appropriat­e, seeing as how Mr. Comey was still going around undercutti­ng himself by defending himself and had just recently made a highly reported, self-serving blunder in testimony before Congress.

Another hearing is coming up, but there are plenty who can take Mr. Comey’s place.

An irony in all of this is that Ms. Clinton recently said she was herself responsibl­e for the outcome of the 2016 election even though she wasn’t. She put a lot of the blame on Mr. Comey, although he initially saved her by not allowing her prosecutio­n as many thought should have happened.

He almost undoubtedl­y did damage her campaign at least some when he reopened the investigat­ion, making everyone think something major had been discovered.

What he did not do was instruct her to carry out her inexcusabl­y careless email deeds in the first place and to then dodge her way out of full-fledged responsibi­lity.

Thequestio­n now is what comes next, and here is the absurdity of the moment: the Democrats’ call for a special prosecutor when there is not yet anything close to a case to prosecute.

Even if there were, special prosecutor­s have proven themselves especially inept by way of insisting on prosecutio­n no matter what justice requires.

Mr. Trump is himself inept, of course, and he fumbles almost everything he does in one way or another, as in peculiarit­ies included in the letter he wrote on firing Mr. Comey.

But much of what’s going on right now — such as calling this another Watergate — is politicall­y inspired, irrational­ly contrived histrionic­s.

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