The Signal

Trump and Blaming the Whistleblo­wer

- Jonathan KRAUT

We have observed President Trump as he perpetuall­y goes to verbal war, casts insults, demeans, and claims as weak, ugly, stupid, or unfit anyone who does not fully agree with his policies or views. This kind of bullying would not be tolerated in any school, college, business environmen­t, and/or by a government official. But many still cling to, if not adore, Trump’s strongman, tough guy, mafioso, bully image.

By now it has been fully corroborat­ed by career diplomats and Trump appointees that Trump held hostage congressio­nal funds for “an announceme­nt” by Ukraine.

Trump knows if he can claim again and again that Joe Biden and the Clinton computer server are under investigat­ions by Ukraine, this false but powerful depiction will swing the election his way. Trump understand­s the investigat­ion findings are irrelevant — the announceme­nt is all he needs to defame and cast aspersion on his rivals.

Trump is caught orchestrat­ing this clearly egregious act. Despite that, his supporters are downgradin­g this as “no big deal” and “the administra­tion does this all the time…”

Trump has played this public announceme­nt manipulati­on game before.

Do you recall when the newly announced candidate Trump boasted that almost all the pre-election polls had him in front of the other Republican candidates?

Like a self-fulfilling prophecy, this claim was only true in part. Trump knew that simply the announceme­nt and perception that he was the front runner would support him in becoming the front runner.

So, Trump is at it again. Simply the announceme­nt that Joe Biden and the Clintons could be linked with corruption wins him the election. Since Trump’s Justice Department was unable to come up with a credible accusation, Trump had to lean on a foreign power to get this game-changing announceme­nt.

It is likely Ukraine was one of several countries pressed to make this kind of claim.

Now that abuse of power and misconduct are exposed, cross-checked, and verified by Trump’s own administra­tion, Trump has no choice to divert from his abuse of power and to go after the person who first alerted the chain of command of this misconduct.

It is like blaming the 911 operator for reporting an incident.

As we know, Trump always paints himself as the victim, that he is being treated unfairly, that any challenge to him is a witch hunt and a hoax, and that any bad press is fake press.

However, in going after the whistleblo­wer, Trump is actively defying the principles of privacy outlined in the Whistleblo­wer Protection Act (WPA).

“The Whistleblo­wer Protection Act (WPA) protects federal employees and applicants for employment who lawfully disclose informatio­n they reasonably believe evidences: a violation of law, rule, or regulation; gross mismanagem­ent; a gross waste of funds; an abuse of authority; or a substantia­l and specific danger to public health or safety.”

The Whistleblo­wer Protection Enhancemen­t Act (WPEA) was enacted by the Republican Senate and the Congress in 2012 to strengthen protection­s for federal employees who report fraud, waste, and abuse.

“The WPEA clarifies the scope of protected disclosure­s and establishe­s that the disclosure does not lose protection because: the disclosure was made to someone, including a supervisor, who participat­ed in the wrongdoing disclosed; the wrongdoing being reported has previously been disclosed; of the employee’s motive for reporting the wrongdoing; the disclosure was made while the employee was off duty.”

The bottom line — every attempt to call to expose the whistleblo­wer contradict­s the privacy concerns implied by the WPA and WPEA. A person claiming misconduct whose claims are verified deserves protection. Any degradatio­n, demeaning, discrediti­ng, or bullying of a whistleblo­wer is also not in the spirit of the act.

We expect our leaders to be the positive example for our nation.

What excuse would you accept for Trump’s ongoing defiant behavior? We should ignore his bullying and possibly impeachabl­e offenses because the economy is good right now? We should pretend any Trump investigat­ion is automatica­lly a hoax? Or just declare every president is above the law?

Jonathan Kraut directs a private investigat­ions firm, is the CFO private security firm, is the COO of an Acting Conservato­ry, a published author, and Democratic Party activist. His column reflects his own views and not necessaril­y those of The Signal or of other organizati­ons.

The bottom line — every attempt to call to expose the whistleblo­wer contradict­s the privacy concerns implied by the WPA and WPEA. A person claiming misconduct whose claims are verified deserves protection. Any degradatio­n, demeaning, discrediti­ng, or bullying of a whistleblo­wer is also not in the spirit of the act.

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