The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

In Barr, Trump has found his champion and advocate

- By Michael Balsamo and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump could only be delighted to have his attorney general in El Salvador, dealing with his biggest issue: illegal immigratio­n. Yet Barr did even better for his boss. In interviews from the Central American country, he’s been offering cryptic comments suggesting the Russia probe unfairly targeted Trump.

More and more, Barr’s becoming Trump’s favorite lawyer. He’s not only enthusiast­ically embracing Trump’s political agenda, he’s also gone all-in by casting special counsel Robert Mueller’s report as vindicatio­n for Trump and hinting that the real wrongdoing was committed by those who launched the investigat­ion.

Serving as attorney general is traditiona­lly a balancing act, carrying out the president’s agenda as a member of the Cabinet while also trying to avoid political bias in enforcing the nation’s laws. As a nominee, Barr cast himself as above the political fray. But as attorney general, he’s turned out much as Democrats feared.

He’s defied subpoenas from Congress and a House panel has voted to hold him in contempt. He provided the White House with the legal case for not giving lawmakers an unredacted version of Mueller’s report. And this week, he baited House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, asking her during a Capitol Hill event if she brought her handcuffs to arrest him.

All the while, Trump has cheered him on.

After attending a Trump law enforcemen­t speech in the Capitol — where he encountere­d Pelosi — Barr flew to El Salvador for meetings on some of Trump’s biggest talking points: the MS-13 street gang and illegal immigratio­n.

Barr toured a jail outside San Salvador — as a crew from Trump’s favorite television network, Fox News, followed alongside — and held a news conference to tout collaborat­ion between U.S. and Central American officials that led to the indictment­s of thousands of gang members “who otherwise might have reached the U.S.”

Just a month after taking office in February, Barr was defending Trump in an Oval Office ceremony, as the president issued his first veto, rejecting Congress’ efforts to block an emergency declaratio­n to fund his border wall. Barr declared that Trump’s national emergency was “clearly authorized under the law.” Then he went further. “And from the standpoint of protecting the American people, it’s imperative,” Barr said.

Trump handed Barr the signed veto. Afterward, he told advisers that he was impressed that Barr stepped forward to not only legally validate the wall, but support it.

That moment, according to four White House officials and Republican­s close to the West Wing, began to solidify Barr’s loyalty in the president’s mind. Trump had spent months raging at his first attorney general, Jeff Sessions, for recusing himself from the Russia probe, which ultimately led to Mueller’s appointmen­t.

After Mueller submitted his report to Barr in March, the attorney general released a four-page summary letter to Congress. Barr’s letter framed the debate about the probe over the next few weeks and, White House officials believe, allowed Trump to declare victory before the release of the full report, the contents of which are far more ambiguous.

Trump also appreciate­d Barr’s combative stance with lawmakers and reporters as he has defended the Justice Department’s handling of the report, and again when he declined to appear before Congress and defied a subpoena, drawing a possible contempt charge. Trump has told close confidants that he “finally” had “my attorney general,” according to two Republican­s close to the White House who were not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

In El Salvador, Barr again talked about “spying” in the 2016 presidenti­al race — one of Trump’s favorite talking points — and noted that Mueller didn’t look into the government’s actions against Trump. But he neglected to mention that this wasn’t Mueller’s mandate, which was to investigat­e Russian election interferen­ce, possible coordinati­on with the Trump campaign and any obstructio­n of that investigat­ion.

Barr hinted at wrongdoing, saying that some of the explanatio­ns he’s been told about the start of the investigat­ion “don’t hang together.” But he didn’t elaborate.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump talks with Attorney General William Barr during the 38th Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service at the U.S. Capitol, Wednesday, May 15, in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump talks with Attorney General William Barr during the 38th Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service at the U.S. Capitol, Wednesday, May 15, in Washington.

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