Times-Herald (Vallejo)

GOP and FBI are at odds as one moves to stop the Trump probes

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON >> When Speaker Kevin McCarthy suggested recently he might stop the FBI from relocating its downtown headquarte­rs to a new facility planned for the Washington suburbs, it was more than idle thinking about an office renovation.

The nod from the Republican speaker is elevating a once-fringe proposal to upend the FBI in the aftermath of the federal indictment of Donald Trump over classified documents and the Justice Department's prosecutio­n of his allies, including some of the nearly 1,000 people charged in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol.

Moving from far-right corners into the mainstream, the emerging effort to overhaul the nation's premier law enforcemen­t agency is rooted in increasing­ly forceful conservati­ve complaints about an overly biased FBI that they claim is being weaponized against them.

“This is a pretty dramatic reversal of what the politics would have been 50 years ago,” said Beverly Gage, a historian at Yale who won a 2023 Pulitzer Prize for her biography of the legendary FBI director, “G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century.”

The shifting attitudes among Republican members of Congress toward the FBI underscore the way Trump's personal grievances have become legislativ­e policy. Once the party of law and order, Republican­s are now antagonist­s of federal law enforcemen­t, underminin­g a storied institutio­n and attacking Justice Department officials whose work is foundation­al to American democracy.

While political criticism of the FBI has followed the bureau since its founding with Hoover, who famously wiretapped civil rights leaders and orchestrat­ed the infiltrati­on of left-wing political organizati­ons, the rightflank campaign against federal law enforcemen­t had mostly simmered at the margins of party politics.

But the Justice Department's indictment of Trump, who has pleaded not guilty to 37 felony counts over storing and refusing to return classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago club, and the ongoing prosecutio­n of Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol, have fueled conservati­ve anger. The Justice Department is also investigat­ing Trump and his allies over the effort to challenge President Joe Biden's election in the run-up to the 2021 Capitol attack.

Conservati­ves criticize the federal law enforcemen­t on multiple fronts; among them, its work with social media companies to flag potentiall­y dangerous postings, and a COVID-era memo from Attorney General Merrick Garland directing resources to combat violence against school officials. They compare the Trump investigat­ions with what they say was a sweetheart deal for Hunter Biden, the president's son, who is pleading guilty to misdemeano­r tax evasion after a long investigat­ion.

“Looking at the actions of the FBI, I think the whole leadership needs to change,” McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol last month.

Fresh from a visit with law enforcemen­t in California, McCarthy said he envisions decentrali­zing the FBI by spreading operations into the states.

“This idea that we're going to build a new, big Pentagon and put all the FBI mainly in one place, I don't think it's a good structure,” McCarthy said Friday, panning a conservati­ve-led proposal to relocate the FBI to Alabama.

“I'd like to see the structure of a much smaller FBI administra­tion building, and more FBI agents out across the country, helping to keep the country safe,” he said. “To me that's better.”

In many ways, the resistance to a robust federal law enforcemen­t agency extends a thread that has run across American history — from the aftermath of the Civil War, when Southern states rejected federal troops for Reconstruc­tion, to Trump's own 2024 campaign announceme­nt in Waco, Texas, a region known for the federal siege of a separatist compound in 1993.

“The Washington headquarte­rs is symbolic,” said Steven G. Bradbury, a former Trump administra­tion general counsel who is now a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank.

Heritage is among those outside entities and advocacy organizati­ons encouragin­g Congress to reimagine the FBI.

Bradbury's “How to Fix the FBI” report outlines nearly a dozen options. One is scaling back its jurisdicti­on. Another is to overhaul section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, known as FISA, that was part of the Trump-Russia investigat­ion over 2016 election interferen­ce and is a program some Democrats also want to limit.

“We have our finger on the pulse of what conservati­ves are reacting to,” said Bradbury. “The FBI needs to be rebuilt.”

Last week, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray appeared before the House Judiciary Committee for the first time since Republican­s took control in January, facing a long list of criticisms, complaints and accusation­s of bias at the bureau.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building is seen Friday, June 9 in Washington.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building is seen Friday, June 9 in Washington.

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