National Review Online
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Rumors have circulated for months that the president is
upset with Jeff Sessions, but rumor is now public — very public — fact. On
Tuesday morning, President Trump slammed his own attorney general on Twitter
for taking “a VERY weak position on Hillary Clinton crimes . . . & Intel
leakers!” That rationale is a sham: On the Clinton scandals, Sessions has
merely followed Trump himself, who said in late November that he had no plans
to pursue an investigation of his erstwhile opponent. In reality, Trump is
reported to be upset at Sessions for needlessly recusing himself from the
ongoing investigation into the Trump campaign’s connections with Russia, which
Trump believes led to the special-counsel investigation.
The story Trump is telling himself is convenient for
creating a scapegoat, but it’s also largely untrue. Sessions may not have been
legally obligated to recuse himself from the Russia inquiry, but there was a
strong political case for his doing so. The more direct cause of the
appointment of a special counsel was the unceremonious firing of FBI director
James Comey, and the deception surrounding it — which was a mess largely of
Trump’s own making.
That the president is taking out his pique on Sessions
shows just how cheaply he holds loyalty. As the senior senator from Alabama,
Sessions was one of Donald Trump’s earliest congressional backers; he huddled
with the candidate regularly throughout the campaign; he was instrumental in
shaping Trump’s immigration policy; and Sessions’s communications director,
Stephen Miller, is now the president’s senior adviser and chief speechwriter.
No single elected official did more to help Donald Trump in 2016. Trump’s
conduct toward a longtime ally is shameful.
It’s also no way to run a government. Hundreds of jobs in
the executive branch remain unfilled, half a year into the administration,
including at the Justice Department, and publicly browbeating subordinates is
not going to entice many prospects into accepting appointments. Potential
candidates are increasingly likely to want to steer clear of this
administration. Needless to say, a half-vacant executive branch is not
conducive to the White House’s agenda.
Neither is the president’s obsessive attention to the
Russia investigation. At some point, Trump will have to resign himself to the
fact that this investigation is not going away, and he would do himself credit
by acknowledging that there are good reasons it shouldn’t, starting with the
incontrovertible fact that Russia made an extraordinary attempt to influence
the American presidential election last year. Even if Trump fires Mueller, his
information will (and should) become part of ongoing inquiries by the Senate
Intelligence and Judiciary Committees.
If, though, the president wants to keep Bob Mueller from
engaging in a fishing expedition — as special-counsel investigations have a
habit of doing — he has options short of firing him. Under the regulations
governing the special counsel, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein can limit
Mueller’s brief and require Mueller to request authority to expand his
investigation to new spheres.
Of course, this will hardly resolve the chaos in which
the Trump White House finds itself perpetually engulfed. That will subside only
when the president becomes more interested in leading his team than in abusing
them.
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