The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Time to impeach President Trump Health care experts not credible

- Jay Bookman

In his terse letter firing James Comey, President Donald Trump made an assertion that will echo through history:

“While I greatly appreciate you informing me, on three separate occasions, that I am not under investigat­ion, I neverthele­ss concur with the judgment of the Department of Justice that you are not able to effectivel­y lead the department.”

Those alleged statements are now central to the scandal. Trump says that two of the incidents occurred in phone calls, one of which Trump initiated. In short, by Trump’s own account, you’ve got the president of the United States, worried that he’s under investigat­ion, calling up the head of the FBI and demanding to be told that he is not. That alone, in any other administra­tion, would be a startling confession.

According to Trump, the other occasion came during a private White House dinner in January, seven days after Trump’s inaugurati­on. Comey was there to press his case for remaining at the FBI, and according to an account leaked by Comey associates, Trump twice demanded a pledge of personal loyalty from Comey.

As director of the FBI, Comey could not legally or ethically do that. His job requires him to remain politicall­y independen­t, to pledge his loyalty to no man and no party. And by Comey’s account, that refusal four months ago to kiss the royal ring led directly to his firing on Tuesday.

The Trump White House says that the subject of loyalty never came up.

We have two conflictin­g accounts of an important event to which there are no other witnesses. Who do we believe? The obsessive liar who constantly remolds reality to suit his own needs, or the man whose judgment can at times be questioned but who throughout his career has demonstrat­ed an obsessive need to tell the truth.

We also have corroborat­ing evidence in the form of Trump’s own words. Look again at the paragraph from the letter firing Comey. Basically, Trump announces that “even though you’ve told me I’m not under investigat­ion, I’m going to fire you anyway.” It draws a clear link between continued employment and the investigat­ion.

In a later TV interview, Trump repeatedly expresses frustratio­n that the Russian investigat­ion hasn’t ended. “It should be over with, in my opinion, should have been over with a long time ago,” he says. Then he goes on: “I was going to fire Comey knowing there was no good time to do it. And in fact when I decided to just do it, I said to myself, I said you know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made-up story, it’s an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should have won.”

So he fired Comey to make this “made-up story” go away.

Trump apologists argue that his ploy hasn’t worked, that public scrutiny and internal FBI outrage are now so intense that the Justice Department wouldn’t dare undermine the investigat­ion. That’s probably true and it doesn’t matter. A botched attempt to use the powers of the presidency to intimidate law enforcemen­t and short-circuit an investigat­ion is still an attempt to intimidate law enforcemen­t and short-circuit an investigat­ion.

If any other president of either party had been caught so red-handed, impeachmen­t would already be underway. Only the collapse of public expectatio­ns for presidenti­al behavior under Trump, combined with blind partisansh­ip, has allowed Trump to slide.

And that in itself is a sign of how troubled our republic has become.

When the Affordable Care Act was first passed, we were assured by the proponents that it would lead to greater coverage, lower costs and better care. These assurances proved wrong on every count. The end result is that tens of millions still have no health insurance, there is less choice for those who do, and skyrocketi­ng costs all around. Many of these same experts are now asserting that the replacemen­t bill recently passed in the House will result in dire consequenc­es — “people will die” among them. The real question is: why should we believe these experts and advocates now, when they were so wrong before? GARY O’NEILL, MARIETTA

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