The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Biden’s classified documents: not malign, but a mistake

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There is no real equivalenc­e between the classified documents found in Joe Biden’s possession at a former office and his home in Wilmington, Delaware, and those taken from Donald Trump. The president had just a tiny fraction of the thousands found on Mr Trump’s premises – but more important is the men’s dramatical­ly different handling of the issue. Mr Biden’s team realised there were documents wrongly held, turned them over, and voluntaril­y allowed the FBI into his home to search for any more. In contrast, Mr Trump was required to return all classified material by a grand jury subpoena, relating to the potentiall­y unlawful removal and destructio­n of White House documents. His lawyers said he had done so. The justice department then spent months trying to resolve the matter before it was obliged to obtain a warrant for a search of Mar-a-Lago – turning up many more classified papers.

Nonetheles­s, the discovery of the documents held by Mr Biden – and especially the drip-drip manner in which they have emerged – is an embarrassm­ent. The president has been sold on his probity and competence compared to the man who preceded him, and challenged Mr Trump’s carelessne­ss regarding classified material. The distinctio­ns between the cases may well be lost on many voters, particular­ly given the rightwing media’s expertise in whataboute­ry. Senior Democrats have been exasperate­d enough to be unusually critical of Mr Biden.

Both cases may reflect in part the US government’s “overclassi­fication addiction”. It classifies some 50m documents a year. This would be a good moment to take stock of its procedures, but the prospects of a sensible accounting are surely slim amid the political mudslingin­g. In any case, prosecutin­g Mr Trump will now be politicall­y as well as legally difficult.

This case is perhaps Mr Biden’s biggest misstep since the (far more significan­t) handling of the withdrawal from Afghanista­n. But the attacks he now faces are as much a sign of things to come as they are the result of his error. Despite the Democrats’ unexpected strength in the midterms, the reality of a divided congress is coming more sharply into view. The Republican­s have long declared their intention to harry Mr Biden with investigat­ions, his son Hunter being the first and easiest target. Some of the most conspiracy-minded Republican­s now sit on the oversight committee.

Meanwhile, the battle over the debt ceiling heralds a new era of legislativ­e brinkmansh­ip. This is unhappily familiar territory for Democratic presidents, but is likely to be bloodier than ever given the current Republican caucus. To ideologica­l small state zeal (easily overcome when Mr Trump sought to raise the debt ceiling), and the perennial desire to hamstring a Democratic administra­tion, can be added the sheer incoherenc­e, unpredicta­bility and nihilism of the “freedom caucus”. That may, however, rebound against Republican­s, making the Democrats look more responsibl­e and likely to protect voters’ interests. Mr Trump has already warned Republican­s not to touch Medicare or social security.

The assumption so far remains that Mr Biden is the party’s most likely candidate in 2024, albeit to a large degree because no credible alternativ­e has emerged, and because it is thought that Mr Trump, while damaged, will probably be the Republican choice. But his achievemen­ts will be further in the rear-view mirror in two years’ time, and neither he nor his party can afford careless errors.

 ?? Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Senior Democrats have been exasperate­d enough to be unusually critical of Mr Biden.’
Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘Senior Democrats have been exasperate­d enough to be unusually critical of Mr Biden.’

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