The Maui News - Weekender

Biden political future clouded by classified document probe

- By STEVE PEOPLES and JILL COLVIN The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Virtually everything was going right for President Joe Biden as he opened the year.

His approval ratings were ticking up. Inflation was slowing. And as Democrats united behind his likely reelection campaign, Republican­s were at war with themselves after a disappoint­ing midterm season.

But on Thursday, Biden’s political outlook veered into more uncertain territory after Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel to investigat­e the Democratic president’s handling of classified documents.

Democrats publicly and privately conceded that the stunning developmen­t was at best an unwelcome distractio­n at an inopportun­e time that muddies the case against Donald Trump. The Republican former president is facing a special counsel of his own and is under federal criminal investigat­ion for his handling of classified documents and other potential transgress­ions.

There are major difference­s between the two cases. Most notably, there is no suggestion that Biden purposeful­ly tried to prevent the documents discovered at his home or office from being turned over or that he was even aware of their presence. Trump, who is being probed for potentiall­y obstructin­g investigat­ors, also had far more classified documents in his possession.

But Thursday’s appointmen­t of a special counsel nonetheles­s thrusts legal uncertaint­y over the sitting president and could revive debate among Democrats about the wisdom of him seeking a second term.

“No one’s going to say this is helpful,” veteran Democratic strategist James Carville said. “It’s pretty evident that’s not the case.”

As Democrats recoiled into a defensive posture, Trump’s would-be Republican rivals in 2024 acknowledg­ed that the contours of the upcoming race had shifted.

Trump “is the luckiest man in American politics,” said John Bolton, who served as national security adviser under Trump and is considerin­g a Republican White House bid. “This ought to be disqualify­ing to both of them.”

Thus begins a messy election season in which the current and former presidents of the United States are both under

investigat­ion by special counsels as they gear up for a potential rematch in 2024. Many voters in both parties were already calling for a new generation of leadership to emerge in the nascent presidenti­al contest. Such calls are now growing louder.

“On many political fronts, Biden’s touted 2024 campaign is potentiall­y vulnerable,” said Norman Solomon, a progressiv­e Democrat who leads the socalled Don’t Run Joe campaign, which is already running television ads against Biden in key states. “Democrats and the country as a whole would be much better off this year and next if he’s not running for president.”

The 80-year-old president has already indicated he plans to seek a second term, but he has yet to make a final decision. His allies believe he is likely to make a formal announceme­nt after the end of March.

So far, at least, no high-profile Democrats appear willing to challenge Biden in a prospectiv­e presidenti­al primary contest. Privately, however, some Democratic officials believe the new federal probe may help motivate an insurgent candidate.

One of Biden’s potential challenger­s, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, recently told The Associated Press that he would make a decision about his 2024 intentions “at the appropriat­e time.” Nina Turner, who chaired Sanders’ 2020 presidenti­al campaign, said after Thursday’s announceme­nt that she hopes a “freedomfig­hting progressiv­e” mounts a primary challenge against Biden in 2024.

“The American people certainly deserve better choices — Republican­s and Democrats,” Turner said, applauding the

government’s decision to review Biden’s handling of classified documents in the same way it’s investigat­ing Trump. “We shouldn’t have these men shoved down our throats.”

Garland’s appointmen­t of a special counsel followed Biden’s acknowledg­ement Thursday morning that documents with classified markings from his time as President Barack Obama’s vice president were found in the garage of his Delaware home and in his personal library, in addition to documents already discovered in a locked closet at an office he used after leaving the White House.

Garland said Biden’s lawyers informed the Justice Department on Thursday morning of the discovery of a classified document at Biden’s home, after FBI agents first retrieved other documents from the garage in December.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Biden said he was cooperatin­g “fully and completely with the Justice Department’s review.”

“People know I take classified documents and classified material seriously,” Biden said. He added: “My Corvette’s in a locked garage.”

To be clear, there are stark difference­s between the cases, including the volume of documents discovered and the gravity of the ongoing grand jury investigat­ion into the matter at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Palm Beach, Florida, home.

Roughly 300 records with classifica­tion markings were recovered from Mar-a-Lago, a private club that hosts constant events. The search of Trump’s property was the culminatio­n of months of back-and-forth between the government and Trump’s representa­tives, who repeatedly resisted efforts to return the missing documents.

And the Justice Department says classified documents were “likely concealed and removed” from a storage room as part of what they allege was an effort to obstruct the federal investigat­ion.

A warrant for the search showed the FBI was investigat­ing crimes including the willful retention of national defense informatio­n and efforts to obstruct the federal probe.

Trump has nonetheles­s seized on the news, seeking to use it to undermine the investigat­ion into his actions.

“It’s over,” Trump said in an interview with conservati­ve talk radio host Mark Levin on Thursday evening. “When all of these documents started coming out and Biden had them, it really changed the complexion and the intensity that they were showing to me because, you know, what they did is — I don’t say far worse, I did nothing wrong — what they did is not good. What they did is bad.”

Some Democrats were hopeful, but not certain, that voters might distinguis­h between Biden’s cooperativ­e approach involving a small trove of documents he apparently possessed by mistake and what federal prosecutor­s described as Trump’s willful obstructio­n of hundreds of government secrets.

“It’s all the difference in the world between having something you don’t know you have and having something you know you have and aren’t supposed to have,” Carville said. “Is that going to get lost among a third of the country? Probably so.”

Bolton, a fierce Trump critic, predicted that the significan­t legal difference­s between the two cases would “get lost in the fog.” Now, he finds it hard to believe that Trump can be prosecuted for the Mar-a-Lago documents, regardless of the circumstan­ces.

“I don’t see how a criminal case goes forward at this point,” Bolton said. “I just think it’s such a cloud over the prosecutio­n.”

While the ground may have shifted, Trump’s legal challenges aren’t going to disappear.

Two months ago, Garland appointed former Justice Department public corruption prosecutor Jack Smith to lead investigat­ions into the classified documents discovered at Mar-a-Lago as well as key aspects of a separate probe involving the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on and efforts to undo the 2020 election.

 ?? AP file photo ?? President Joe Biden responds a reporters question after speaking about the economy in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House Campus on Thursday in Washington.
AP file photo President Joe Biden responds a reporters question after speaking about the economy in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House Campus on Thursday in Washington.

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