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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 04:15 PM Apr 2018

The best source of evidence for Mueller is Trump

By Jennifer Rubin April 26 at 1:15 PM

If every FBI subject were as loose-lipped and oblivious as President Trump, they’d need to build more federal prisons. His latest outburst came on “Fox & Friends” Thursday morning: “And our Justice Department — which I try and stay away from, but at some point I won’t — our Justice Department should be looking at that kind of stuff, not the nonsense of collusion with Russia!” Several aspects of this require scrutiny.

First, if Trump is “trying,” he’s not trying very hard. Consider his ongoing threats to fire Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein and special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, his rage at Attorney General Jeff Sessions over his decision to recuse himself from Russia matters, his request of then-FBI Director James B. Comey to give fired national security adviser Michael Flynn a pass, his request of “loyalty” from Comey, his firing of Comey, his pressure campaign to oust former deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe, his constant hectoring to investigate his former political opponent Hillary Clinton and his unfounded accusations of FBI corruption. If that is “staying away” from the Justice Department one shudders to think what interference would look like.

Former White House counsel Norman Eisen explains, “Obstruction occurs when anyone interferes with a law enforcement investigation with ‘corrupt intent’ (as all America now knows thanks to Trump turning our media into a long-running criminal law seminar).” He points to “a mosaic of evidence, substantial evidence, of obstruction, that was deepened by Trump’s reported repeated threats to fire Robert Mueller after he took over investigating ‘this Russia thing.’ Now comes yet another threat to interfere.” He adds, “Corrupt intent is indicated by the long pattern of self-interested dealing, not to mention the spurious nature of the ‘kind of stuff’ Trump wants DOJ to look at, and his premature declaration regarding collusion.”

Second, Trump’s language betrays his motive to interfere with, to obstruct, the Russia investigation. Ironically, “corrupt intent,” usually difficult to prove, is now being demonstrated to millions of viewers. “Trump’s ominous statement that ‘at some point [he] won’t’ stay ‘away from our Justice Department’ can help weaponize public and hopefully congressional support for measures to protect Mueller and Rosenstein and, in that sense, the remark is helpful to Mueller,” says constitutional scholar Laurence H. Tribe. Trump persists in telling us he wants to rid himself of what he thinks is a witch hunt. However, former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance tells me, “It is not up to the President to decide which criminal cases get investigated. And it’s especially important to adhere to this rule of law if the President tries to interfere with an investigation that is coming perilously close to his friends, family and possibly even himself. Otherwise, there is no justice.” Indeed, the bipartisan bill to protect Mueller passed the Senate Judiciary Committee 14 to 7 with four GOP votes. (Now it’s up to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) to decide if he will exercise his constitutional obligations or if he’ll continue as Trump’s enabler.)

And that brings us to the reason Trump’s incessant threats and efforts to micromanage the Justice Department are so dangerous. Rachel Kleinfeld of the Carnegie Endowment for the Humanities wrote a prescient piece warning about the threats to liberal democracies when leaders use law enforcement as a political weapon or shield. “Authoritarian regimes, of course, are marked by political interference in military and law enforcement,” she writes. “In Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, a deep politicization of the police and military abetted authoritarian rule in the 1970s and 1980s and continues to cast a pall over their democracies. Elected leaders who wish to make their democracies more authoritarian often start with their country’s security apparatus.” From there, a downward spiral begins:

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2018/04/26/the-best-source-of-evidence-for-mueller-is-trump/

4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The best source of evidence for Mueller is Trump (Original Post) DonViejo Apr 2018 OP
No question at all as to what McTurte will do, in my mind anyway. lark Apr 2018 #1
I would love to see Trump sit for an interview. With a little flattery, Mueller would have Trump Arkansas Granny Apr 2018 #2
And she's an attorney RandomAccess Apr 2018 #3
It's too late, Ms. Rubin PJMcK Apr 2018 #4

lark

(23,123 posts)
1. No question at all as to what McTurte will do, in my mind anyway.
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 04:22 PM
Apr 2018

He will protect himself by killing the bill because he is personally guilty of conspiracy with Russia to tilt the election and Russia has proof from the hacking they did of the RNC. He doesn't give a damn about anyone except himself and his personal power and $$.

Arkansas Granny

(31,519 posts)
2. I would love to see Trump sit for an interview. With a little flattery, Mueller would have Trump
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 04:38 PM
Apr 2018

giving out his bank account info. Tell me again what a stable genius he is.

PJMcK

(22,037 posts)
4. It's too late, Ms. Rubin
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 09:49 PM
Apr 2018

Your newspaper and many television outlets let this monstrosity into our political system.

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