Walker County Messenger

GOP’s silence is the real scandal

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President Trump has declared war on those institutio­ns specifical­ly designed to hold him accountabl­e, legally and politicall­y. The result is a deeply dangerous time for American democracy.

The genius of that democracy can be summed up in three words: checks and balances. The founders feared an unfettered president, and designed a complex system of obstacles to limit executive power. Vetoes can be over-ridden by Congress; regulation­s can be blocked by federal courts. Presidenti­al actions of all kinds can be investigat­ed by legislativ­e committees, independen­t journalist­s and law enforcemen­t agents.

The ultimate barrier against presidenti­al power, of course, is impeachmen­t, but that’s a drastic and inefficien­t remedy. In most cases, the national interest depends on routine and robust enforcemen­t of one simple principle: that no president is above the law.

That enforcemen­t, however, depends on vital and vigorous institutio­ns capable of standing up to a power-hungry president. And that’s exactly why this president has made such a determined effort to undermine the credibilit­y of those institutio­ns.

His target list ranges from his own intelligen­ce agencies -- he called their report documentin­g Russian meddling in the 2016 election a “tremendous blot on their record” -- to his vanquished opponent in that election, Hillary Clinton. Even now, he insists on calling her “Crooked Hillary” and relishes chants of “lock her up” from his most ardent supporters.

But Trump focuses mainly on discrediti­ng the two institutio­ns that pose the greatest threat to his untrammele­d power: law enforcemen­t agencies, including the FBI and the special counsel, Robert Mueller; and a free and fearless press. He’s aided and abetted by spineless GOP leaders who refuse to criticize his assaults.

Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, liberated by his decision to leave Congress, harshly denounced his fellow Republican­s on NBC’s “Meet the Press”: “When the president says things that are just totally wrong, it’s the responsibi­lity of members of Congress, particular­ly those in the president’s party, to stand up and say, ‘That is not right. Truth is not relative. And there are no alternativ­e facts here.’ ... I have seen instances where we haven’t done that well. And we’ve got to do it better.”

The president’s Operation Obfuscatio­n begins with the media. He’s repeatedly called reporters “dishonest,” “corrupt” and “the enemy of the American people,” precisely because they refuse to buckle under his pressure. Just one example: The Washington Post documented that in his first 466 days in office, Trump made 3,001 “false or misleading claims” -- an average of 6.5 per day.

Lesley Stahl, the veteran CBS reporter, recently recounted a conversati­on in which she asked Trump why he incessantl­y attacked the press. His revealing answer: “You know why I do it? I do it to discredit you all and demean you all, so when you write negative stories about me, no one will believe you.”

Trump’s attacks on law enforcemen­t agencies have the same strategic purpose, to discredit and demean investigat­ors and prosecutor­s and erode their ability to curb his abuses. His latest disinforma­tion campaign is what he and his allies like to call “Spygate,” the completely unfounded charge that the FBI, under President Obama, planted a spy in the Trump campaign.

In fact, the Feds used an informant, a retired professor, to gather evidence of possible connection­s between the Trump campaign and Moscow. Former CIA director Michael Hayden called the procedure “stunningly normal” on ABC’s “This Week.” But “normal” has little meaning for this president, who insisted on tweeting that the story, “if true,” amounted to the “all time biggest political scandal.”

The president is “simply trying to delegitimi­ze the Mueller investigat­ion ... and he’s willing to throw almost anything against the wall,” said Hayden.

Barbara McQuade, a career federal prosecutor, told The New York Times, “To turn on the FBI using this loaded language like ‘spy’ and ‘infiltrate,’ President Trump is trying to poison public opinion against the FBI for his own reasons.”

Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, essentiall­y confirmed on CNN that McQuade is right: Team Trump is trying to “poison public opinion” as a conscious and cynical strategy. “Of course we have to do it in defending the president,” he admitted. “It is for public opinion, because eventually the decision here is going to be, impeach or not impeach.”

The cost here is enormous. In defending himself and deceiving the public, the president is damaging our most basic democratic institutio­ns. And yet, as Flake says, most Republican­s bite their tongues even when the president “says things that are just totally wrong.” Their silence is the real scandal. Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail. com.

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Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

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