The Morning Call (Sunday)

Docs probe underminin­g Biden’s competence claim

- By Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden offered himself to Americans as a president they wouldn’t have to think about after the tumult of his predecesso­r. But an excruciati­ng week of awkward disclosure­s and the appointmen­t of a special counsel to investigat­e classified records found at his Delaware home and a former office dating to his time as vice president is beginning to strain his claim to competence.

The surprise revelation­s that on at least four different occasions Biden’s lawyers found improperly stored classified documents and official records evoked the turmoil surroundin­g Donald Trump’s presidency, a fouryear ruckus that Biden has tried to move the country past. In the latest developmen­t, the White House acknowledg­ed on Saturday that Biden’s lawyers had turned up even more such documents at the home than previously known.

It’s an embarrassm­ent to Biden, and the selection of a special counsel to investigat­e potential criminal wrongdoing in the matter exposes the president to a new, self-inflicted risk.

Further, it complicate­s the Justice Department’s calculus about whether to bring charges against Trump over his handling of classified material, hands fresh ammunition to newly empowered House Republican­s eager to launch investigat­ions and undercuts a central plank of Biden’s pitch to voters just as he looks to launch a reelection bid in the coming months.

“It just won’t be so exhausting,” former President Barack Obama had promised about a Biden presidency in the closing days of the 2020 campaign, adding that voters are “not going to have to think about the crazy things … and that is worth a lot.”

The Biden case is markedly different from Trump’s mishandlin­g of classified documents and official records — not least because Biden’s team voluntaril­y turned them over to federal officials when they were discovered. Still, it has caused private frustratio­n among Biden allies and some advisers because the president and his team, as billed, were supposed to be better than this.

The current White House explanatio­n, offered by lawyer Richard Sauber, is that the special counsel’s inquiry “will show that these documents were inadverten­tly misplaced” — a “mistake” with the nation’s secrets.

Biden seemingly ignored or forgot about a cardinal rule in politics: Check your closet for skeletons before you complain about someone else’s. His public criticisms about Trump’s “irresponsi­ble” handling of classified documents, however different the circumstan­ces, are now coming back to haunt him.

Biden allies say the packing up of his vice presidenti­al office happened swiftly. But that explanatio­n, said Richard Painter, the top ethics official in the George W. Bush administra­tion, suggests behavior that was “incredibly careless and really quite shocking.”

Painter said that while Biden probably would avoid the criminal issues looming over Trump because there is so far no sense that Biden intentiona­lly mishandled

classified records, it still merited investigat­ion. “It’s still very worrisome,” he said. “It’s a serious national security breach.”

Beyond all that, the piecemeal way that word of the discoverie­s became public — more than two months after the first batch of classified documents had been found at the Penn Biden Center in Washington — has drawn bewilderme­nt from crisis management experts.

“The White House can’t let itself be seen as hiding informatio­n or be bled to death by investigat­ors’ or others’ leaks,” said Adam

Goldberg, who served as special associate counsel to President Bill Clinton from 1996-1999.

“If there’s any further bad news out there, they better be the ones to put it out and put it out all at once,” Goldberg said.

A statement from Sauber on Saturday about the latest discovery of classified documents in Delaware did not explain why the White House waited two days to provide an updated accounting.

If Biden’s White House needs to get its messaging back on track after a week

of missteps and unforced errors, Trump’s issues go well beyond mere competence.

“On the political front, assuming the White House gets its communicat­ions right, I’m not worried about any political fallout,” said Goldberg. “With Trump, competency hasn’t been the issue, intentiona­l misconduct has been. While Republican­s will try to muddy this up, there’s just such a big difference between Biden discoverin­g and disclosing these on his own and Trump’s obstructio­n and lying.”

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden, about to speak to reporters Thursday, is the latest occupant of the Oval Office to confront an inquiry by a special prosecutor.
SARAH SILBIGER/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden, about to speak to reporters Thursday, is the latest occupant of the Oval Office to confront an inquiry by a special prosecutor.

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