By David French
Friday, April 20, 2018
With the news yesterday that the Department of Justice
inspector general had referred his findings regarding former FBI deputy
director Andrew McCabe to the U.S. attorney in Washington for possible
prosecution, it seemed as if a narrative had been finally laid to rest. It
turns out McCabe was no hero of the #resistance. He was a bureaucrat who lied,
and tweets like this one, from former CIA director John Brennan, did not age
well:
When the full extent of your
venality, moral turpitude, and political corruption becomes known, you will
take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the dustbin of history.
You may scapegoat Andy McCabe, but you will
not destroy America...America will triumph over you.
https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/974859881827258369 …
@JohnBrennan 2:00 PM - Mar 17, 2018
When you read the inspector general’s report, released
last week, a clear picture emerges. McCabe not only leaked sensitive
information to the media in violation of relevant DOJ policies, but he lied
about those leaks to his boss, James Comey, and to internal investigators.
Indeed, the “lack of candor” is so clear, so brazen, that one wonders how
McCabe conducted his post-termination public-relations campaign, which included
an emotional op-ed in the Washington Post,
knowing full well the truth would eventually come out.
Specifically, McCabe authorized subordinates (namely, the
now-infamous Lisa Page) to talk to Wall
Street Journal reporter Devlin Barrett not just about an ongoing FBI
investigation into the Clinton Foundation but also about rifts between the FBI
and the Obama DOJ. Then, after these carefully planned leaks, McCabe misled
Comey, FBI investigators, and the inspector general regarding several material
facts.
In other words, not only did he deserve to be fired, but
prosecutors should carefully consider whether to bring charges. He is no
martyr. Every dime of the $567,996 raised on GoFundMe for the “Andrew McCabe
Defense Fund” should be refunded, with an apology. He’s a victim not of
Trump-administration vindictiveness but rather of his own misdeeds.
But let’s step back from a moment from the narrow
question of McCabe’s termination. The inspector general’s report is fascinating
in other ways. It deals a blow to two different narratives, one Republican and
the other Democrat, revealing that the emerging story of the “deep state,” the
Trump administration, and the 2016 election is far more complicated than
partisans have portrayed.
First, think about this — the deep state did indeed
attack late in the 2016 presidential election, and it torpedoed . . . Hillary
Clinton. The foundation of an immense amount of contemporary Republican
political paranoia is the unshakeable conviction that the permanent
law-enforcement bureaucracy preferred Clinton to Trump and that it took actions
designed to both help Clinton win and delegitimize Trump if she lost.
The emerging facts, however, indicate that Comey, McCabe,
and even Page departed from DOJ policy late in the campaign to hit the Clinton
campaign, hard, with news that (1) confirmed that the email investigation had
been reopened; (2) confirmed the existence of an FBI investigation of the
Clinton Foundation; and (3) exposed deep rifts with the Obama DOJ, including
McCabe’s dramatic confrontation with a senior Obama official who “expressed concerns
about FBI agents taking overt steps in the CF Investigation during the
presidential campaign.”
McCabe “pushed back,” reportedly asking, “are you telling
me that I need to shut down a validly predicated investigation?”
Taken together, this is explosive stuff. And it’s
especially explosive when you consider that just as the FBI was announcing the
reopening of the email investigation and leaking the existence of the
foundation investigation, it was sitting on news that it had been investigating
Trump-campaign contacts with Russia since July.
None of this excuses the FBI’s decision to exonerate
Hillary in the email scandal by applying a made-up legal standard, but that
decision can’t be separated from the repeated, significant blows the FBI dealt
to Clinton in the months that followed. So, are you sure the FBI was trying to help Hillary? Are you sure that it’s been waging a clandestine
bureaucratic war exclusively on behalf of Democrats? Don’t these facts, at the
very least, complicate the worst Republican conspiracy theories?
But lest Democrats feel too vindicated, let’s turn to the
next myth — one of their own. If you spent five minutes perusing Twitter after
McCabe’s termination, you would have walked away utterly convinced that the
Trump DOJ acted vindictively. It fired McCabe because Trump hates McCabe. Even
worse, it fired him on the eve of retirement to inflict maximum misery on a
good man. And it did all these things because the Trump DOJ is corrupt,
hopelessly tainted by the president’s authoritarian demands for loyalty and
fealty.
But the facts tell a different story. The inspector
general uncovered real wrongdoing. The Office of Professional Responsibility,
which recommended his termination, was presented with actual evidence of lack
of candor. Attorney General Jeff Sessions had ample reason to fire McCabe.
When you take a broader view of the DOJ’s behavior since
Trump’s inauguration, you see a series of actions that not only have infuriated
the president on occasion, but also have demonstrated the DOJ’s commitment to
the rule of law. Sessions was right to recuse himself from the Russia
investigation. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein was right to appoint a
special counsel after Trump fired Comey. The DOJ has been right to so far
resist partisan calls for another special counsel to investigate so-called
“FISA-gate.”
In fact, the more we learn about the 2016 campaign, the
worse the Obama DOJ looks. The
inspector general’s report and the Comey book tour represent a reminder of its
improper pressure and improper behavior — from the pressure to call the Clinton
email investigation a mere “matter,” to the tarmac meeting, to the president’s
own comments dismissing the scandal, and to the pressure placed on the FBI to
refrain from taking “overt steps” in the Clinton Foundation investigation. An
allegedly “scandal-free” administration seems to have placed its thumb on the
scales of justice.
We may have to wait years to learn the full story of the
2016 election. Indeed, some facts may remain forever hidden or forever
disputed. But the McCabe inspector-general report should serve as a reminder to
maintain an open mind. As my friend Ben Shapiro is fond of saying, “Facts don’t
care about feelings.” The legal corollary is that evidence is indifferent to
your narrative. So, here we are. McCabe is no hero of the #resistance. The FBI
helped beat Hillary. And the Trump DOJ can still do things by the book. Ponder
those truths while we wait for the next shoes to drop.
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