The Record (Troy, NY)

After Mueller, the path for House Democrats

- E.J. Dionne is on Twitter: @ EJDionne.

It may not have been his intention, but special counsel Robert Mueller has forced a momentous choice on the Democrats who control the House of Representa­tives. How they navigate the next several months will matter not only to politics but, more importantl­y, to whether the rule of law prevails.

If we lived in a normal time with a normal president, a normal Republican Party and a normal attorney general, none of this would be so difficult. Mueller’s report is devastatin­g. It portrays a lying, lawless president who pressured aides to obstruct the probe and was happy —“Russia, if you’re listening ... “— to win office with the help of a hostile foreign power. It also, by the way, shows him to be weak and hapless. His aides ignored his orders, and he regularly pandered to a Russian dictator. Mueller’s catalogue of infamy might have led Republican­s of another day to say: Enough. But the GOP’s new standard seems to be that a president is great as long as he’s unindicted.

And never mind that the failure to six. charge Donald Trump stem not from his innocence but from a Justice Department legal opinion saying that a sitting president can’t be indicted. Mueller explained he had “fairness concerns” — a truly charming qualm in light of the thuggishne­ss described in the rest of the report — because the no-indictment rule meant there could be no trial. The president would lack an “adversaria­l opportunit­y for public name-clearing before an impartial adjudicato­r.”

And perhaps Mueller did not reckon with an attorney general so eager to become the president’s personal lawyer and chief propagandi­st. William Barr sat on the document for 27 days and mischaract­erized it in his March 24 letter. He mischaract­erized it again just an hour before it was released. This leaves Democrats furious — and on their own. Unfortunat­ely, it is not news that this party has a nasty habit of dividing into hostile camps. On the one side, the cautious; on the other side, the aggressive. The prudent ones say that members of the hitfor-the-fences crowd don’t understand the political constraint­s. The pugnacious ones say their circumspec­t colleagues are timid sellouts. Sometimes these fights are relatively harmless, but not this time. Holding Trump accountabl­e for behavior that makes Richard Nixon look like George Washington matters, for the present, and for the future. Those demanding impeachmen­t are right to say that Mueller’s report can’t just be filed away and ignored. But being tough and determined is not enough. The House also needs to be sober and responsibl­e. This needle needs to be threaded not just for show, or for narrow electoral reasons. Trump and Barr have begun a battle for the minds and hearts of that small number already Barr’s calculated locked of Americans into sloth their who in positions. making are not the report public gave the president and his AG side-kick an opportunit­y to pre-shape how its findings would be received. The uncommitte­d now need to see the full horror of what Mueller revealed about this president. A resolute but deliberate approach is more likely to persuade them. When House Speaker Nancy Pelosi joins her caucus on a conference call on Monday, she will reiterate her “one step at a time” strategy. The bottom line is that rushing into impeachmen­t and ruling it out are equally foolish. What this means is that the House Judiciary, Intelligen­ce, and Oversight and Reform Committees should and will begin inquiries immediatel­y. Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler took the first step on Friday by subpoenain­g the full, unredacted Mueller report. Mueller himself has already been asked to appear before both Judiciary and Intelligen­ce. Nothing is gained by labelling these initial hearings and document-requests as part of an “impeachmen­t” process. But impeachmen­t Since all right impeachmen­t Democrats’ they that accountabi­lity, Trump have to should Trump take a right legal would formal remain and will arguments to Barr preserving strengthen prefer informatio­n steps on will the to toward resist table. deep that the the issue dential Of in course, candidates politics. Trump Democratic are is already not the presi- only out there mate, focusing economic on justice health and care, polit- cliical tinue reform. other work The House while the can investi- congators do their jobs. In an ideal world, the corruption and deceitfuln­ess Mueller catalogued would already have Trump flying off to one of his golf resorts for good. But we do not live in such a world. Defending democratic values and republican government requires fearlessne­ss. It also takes patience.

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 ??  ?? EJ Dionne Columnist
EJ Dionne Columnist

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