The Denver Post

The Durham fiasco is a warning of what’s to come

- By Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg became a columnist for The New York Times in 2017.

Thank goodness Speaker Kevin Mccarthy has created a House subcommitt­ee on the weaponizat­ion of the federal government!

Last week, The New York Times reported on an outrageous example of such weaponizat­ion, the flagrant use of federal law enforcemen­t powers to target an administra­tion’s political enemies. I’m talking, of course, about the John Durham special counsel investigat­ion, which was meant to root out the ostensibly corrupt origins of Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion, and quickly came to embody the sins that Donald Trump and his allies projected onto the FBI.

Trump’s circle insisted, falsely, that the Mueller inquiry was a hit job that employed Russian disinforma­tion — via the Steele dossier — to frame Trump, all part of a plot cooked up by the Hillary Rodham Clinton campaign. Durham seems to have bought into this Trumpist conspiracy theory, and to help prove it, he tried to employ what appears to be Russian disinforma­tion to go after the Clinton camp. More specifical­ly, he used dubious Russian intelligen­ce memos, which analysts believed were seeded with falsehoods, to try to convince a court to give him access to the emails of an aide to George Soros, which he believed would show Clinton-related wrongdoing.

Astonishin­gly, the Times found that although Trump’s Attorney General Bill Barr and Durham were in Europe looking for evidence to discredit the Russia investigat­ion, Italian officials gave them a “potentiall­y explosive tip” linking Trump to “certain suspected financial crimes.” Rather than assign a new prosecutor to look into those suspected crimes, Barr folded the matter into Durham’s inquiry, giving Durham criminal prosecutio­n powers for the first time.

Then the attorney general sat back while the media inferred that the criminal investigat­ion must mean Durham had found evidence of malfeasanc­e connected to Russiagate. Barr quietly let an investigat­ion into Trump be used to cast aspersions on Trump’s perceived enemies. (The fate of that inquiry remains a mystery.)

This squalid episode is a noteperfec­t example of how Republican scandal-mongering operates. The right ascribes to its adversarie­s, whether in the Democratic Party or the putative deep state, monstrous corruption and elaborate conspiraci­es. Then, in the name of fighting back, it mimics the tactics it has accused its foes of using.

Look, for example, at the behavior that gave rise to Trump’s first impeachmen­t. Trump falsely claimed that Joe Biden, as vice president, used the threat of withholdin­g American loan guarantees to blackmail the Ukrainian government into doing his personal bidding. Hoping to get Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, to substantia­te his lies, Trump tried to use the threat of withholdin­g American aid to … blackmail the Ukrainian government into doing his personal bidding. The symmetry between accusation­s and counter-accusation­s, in turn, fosters widespread cynicism.

It’s important to keep this in mind because we’re about to see a lot more of it. Now that they control the House, Republican­s have prioritize­d investigat­ing their political opponents. Mccarthy has stacked the Oversight Committee, central to the House’s investigat­ive apparatus, with flame-throwing fantasists, including Marjorie Taylor Greene, Paul Gosar and Lauren Boebert.

There are going to be investigat­ions into Hunter Biden, and investigat­ions into the origins of the pandemic. There likely will be scrutiny of the FBI’S search of Mar-a-lago and Biden’s handling of classified documents. And, as my colleague David Firestone on the editorial board put it over the weekend, “Republican­s in the House are launching a new snipe hunt” for proof that the FBI and other intelligen­ce agencies were “weaponized” against conservati­ves.

These all promise to be congressio­nal equivalent­s of the Durham inquiry. Certainly most, if not all, congressio­nal investigat­ions are politicall­y motivated, but there is neverthele­ss a difference between inquiries predicated on something real, and those, like the many investigat­ions in the Benghazi attack, meant to troll for dirt and reify Fox News phantasms. House Democrats examined Trump’s interferen­ce with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the acute stage of the pandemic. House Republican­s plan to look into what Republican congressma­n Jim Banks termed the military’s “dangerous” COVID-19 vaccine mandates. There might be an equivalenc­e in the form of these two undertakin­gs, but not in their empirical basis.

It remains to be seen whether our political media is up for the task of making these distinctio­ns. The coverage of Trump’s and Biden’s respective retention of classified documents offers little cause for optimism. Again and again, journalist­s and pundits have noted that, although the two cases are very different, there are seeming similariti­es, and those similariti­es are good for Trump. This is something of a self-fulfilling prophecy.

“John Durham has already won,” said the headline of a Politico article from last year, noting his success in perpetuati­ng the right’s fevered counter-history of Russiagate. Of course he didn’t win; he would go on to lose both cases arising from his investigat­ion as well as the honorable reputation he had before he started it. What he did manage to do, however, was spread a lot of confusion and waste a lot of time. Now the Republican House picks up where he left off.

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