By Nick
Catoggio
Tuesday,
January 10, 2023
Between
November’s midterm debacle, casual dinners with neo-Nazis, a 2024 campaign that launched to
zero fanfare, and a “MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT” that embarrassed even diehard
fans, it’s been a rough go lately for Florida’s most famous semi-retiree.
But
everyone’s luck changes eventually. And Donald Trump is, after all, the luckiest man alive.
So we
all should have anticipated that classified documents would eventually turn
up at a private office Joe Biden
maintained after
leaving the vice presidency and before launching his 2020 campaign.
For
months the reporting on Trump’s possession of classified material grew
increasingly damning, shifting from a story about improperly retaining
documents to a story about improperly concealing documents to a story about
improperly obstructing the recovery of documents. Even some reliable Trump
allies, presented with the facts alleged by the Justice Department, concede
that there’s enough to indict him. No prosecutor wants to try a
former president, knowing how they’ll be accused of politicizing criminal law,
but at some point the malfeasance becomes so overt that declining to try him
would itself amount to politicization.
As many,
many others have said, an average Joe who removed as many sensitive documents
as Trump did would already be caught in the gears of America’s justice system
and ground to a pulp. He hasn’t been targeted because of who he is, he’s
been spared because of who he is. So far.
But now
that Team Biden has splashed into a classified documents scandal of its own, it
seems likely to me that Trump will be let off the hook entirely. The one thing
that could be counted on to drive wavering Republicans back into his corner in
this matter has come to pass. They’ve been handed a “libs do it too” tu
quoque on a silver platter.
I can
hear Never Trumpers and Democrats screaming at me in the comments: “The two
scandals are totally different! The facts of what Biden did aren’t even a
scandal!” Perhaps. We’ll see what the reporting turns up. Maybe he and his team
didn’t just misplace documents but deliberately hid them in hopes of keeping
them forever. Maybe the feds asked for the documents back—repeatedly—and were
filibustered and deceived by Biden’s aides. Maybe he really is guilty of what
Trump appears to be guilty of.
But if
he isn’t, do you trust Americans to make discerning judgments about that? It’s
hard enough in 2023 for political junkies to hear themselves think over the din
of partisan noise. Imagine the average voter who follows the news casually
trying to navigate their way to understanding the similarities and differences
between the two cases.
Charging
Trump and securing a conviction that would be respected by a meaningful share
of Republicans was always going to be a high wall for special counsel Jack Smith and the DOJ to scale. Unless Biden is also
charged, the wall just got 10 feet higher.
***
The
similarities between the cases are basic. Both Trump and Biden appear to have
removed classified documents to private, non-secure spaces. Classified material
belongs to the federal government, not to the officials who serve in it; those
officials are supposed to return the material in their possession to the
National Archives upon leaving office. Failing to do so is a no-no. Failing to
do so and then storing the material in a space that’s not secure, where people
who lack a security clearance might stumble upon it, is a bigger no-no.
The
Biden documents, 10 or so in number, were allegedly recovered from a
locked closet at the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., on November 2,
2022. According to CNN, they “included some top-secret files with the
‘sensitive compartmented information’ designation, also known as SCI, which is
used for highly sensitive information obtained from intelligence sources.” On
Tuesday the network reported that some of the documents relate to Ukraine, Iran, and the U.K.
Not
good.
The list
of differences between the two cases runs a little longer.
Trump
and his fans are quick to note one difference, the fact that he was president
when he removed classified material to his private office whereas Biden was
merely vice president. That’s an important distinction in theory since only the
president enjoys the power to declassify classified material. Trump could
conceivably have declassified the documents found at Mar-a-Lago. Biden couldn’t
have declassified the documents found in the locker at the Penn Biden Center.
But it’s
a silly distinction under the circumstances. After all, none of the crimes referenced in the Mar-a-Lago
search warrant depend on information being classified. One had to do with
obstruction, another had to do with destroying government records, the third
had to do with retaining information related to national defense. Trump has
spent months insisting that he declassified the documents he took with
him through the power of his mind, without making any written record
of the declassification, but that’s both insane and a non sequitur. Even
granting that it’s true for argument’s sake, he’s still in legal hot water.
There
are real distinctions between the two cases. For starters, there’s the sheer
volume of material that was taken. As of late August of last year the feds had
allegedly recovered more than 11,000 government records from Trump, of which more than 300 had classified
markings. Of those
records, 18 were labeled “top secret” and 54 labeled “secret.” Another 48
folders marked “classified” were discovered and found to be empty. According to
the Washington Post, some of the Trump documents
featured “highly sensitive information” about Iran and China that “could expose
intelligence-gathering methods” if revealed. One document supposedly contained
information on an unspecified foreign government’s nuclear defenses. Other documents were marked “HCS,” which has to do with
clandestine intelligence assets—i.e, spies.
It’s
conceivable that 10 classified documents were innocently misplaced while papers
were being moved. But 300?
Another
difference is how the material was recovered. If you believe Biden’s lawyers, they discovered the 10 documents
in November themselves while packing files and immediately alerted the National
Archives, which didn’t know the files were missing. Contrast that with
the epic two-year multi-agency saga of trying to get Trump to
return the material he’d taken, with the National Archives first asking for
documents all the way back in May 2021. Over time, polite requests turned into
cajoling, cajoling turned into warnings, warnings turned into subpoenas. After
Team Trump returned some documents to comply with one subpoena, a Trump lawyer certified
that there was no more sensitive material in his possession to her
knowledge—which turned out to be false. Months later, surveillance footage
of comings and goings in a Mar-a-Lago storage room convinced the feds that
classified documents might still be on the premises and were being moved
around. When the FBI searched the building on August 8, 2022, those suspicions
were confirmed.
Even
now, Trump continues to drag out the process. Late last year he hired a team of
private investigators to search his properties for any other classified
material. That team found two documents with classified markings in a storage
unit in West Palm Beach. Alarmed, the feds asked for the names of the
investigators so that they could speak to them directly—but Trump’s
lawyers initially refused, then reluctantly agreed provided
that the investigators’ names be kept secret. At wit’s end, an exasperated DOJ
finally asked a federal judge to hold members of Trump’s office in
contempt for
having failed to fully comply with last year’s subpoena.
Beyond
the number of documents taken and the effort required to get them back, the
culpability of each of the principals in these matters might differ
meaningfully as well.
A source
told CNN that “Biden is still not aware of what is
contained in the actual documents” that were found in the closet at the Penn
Biden Center. Maybe that’s true, maybe it isn’t, but it’s notable that he
wasn’t the only person there with a security clearance. Antony Blinken and Steve Ricchetti joined the center after
serving in high-ranking positions in the Obama administration and before
joining Biden’s government. One of them rather than Biden might have brought
the documents into the building.
Setting
aside the identity of the culprit, experts in the field note that intent matters, as
tends to be the case in American law. Section 793(d) of the Espionage Act makes it a crime to “willfully
retain” information related to national defense when an officer of the United
States asks for it back. Mistakenly packing up classified documents with
personal papers is a sin, but a venial sin provided that one puts things right
once the documents are discovered.
Intentionally
retaining classified material by defying government requests for its return is,
on the other hand, a mortal sin. And there’s plenty of reason to think from
prior reporting that what Trump did here was intentional. When the National
Archives finally browbeat him into packing up and returning some documents
early last year, “people familiar with the episode said Trump oversaw the
process himself — and did so with great secrecy, declining to show some items
even to top aides,” the Washington Post reported in August 2022. A New York Times report around the same time
corroborated that, alleging that “Mr. Trump went through the boxes himself in
late 2021, according to multiple people briefed on his efforts, before turning
them over.” A Trump employee allegedly told the FBI that the boss himself had instructed him to move boxes of documents
from the Mar-a-Lago storage room.
Why
Trump insisted on retaining classified documents knowing the legal trouble it
could bring him is unclear, but John Bolton’s theory has always struck me as
elegant and plausible. Sometimes a child wants what a child wants, and the more
you tell him he can’t have it the more he wants it.
An
authoritarian like Trump will always struggle to grasp the distinction between
his public office and his personal interest. (That deficiency led to the first
of his two impeachments, in fact.) It’s the most logical thing in the world for
him to have concluded that government property was and remains his personal
property, especially when he had populist loudmouths like Judicial Watch chief Tom Fitton in his ear urging him to
fight, fight, fight, fight, fight.
Maybe
this will get worse for Biden. New reporting might reveal that there were more
documents found at the Penn Biden Center than we thought or that their contents
were especially sensitive or that he and his lawyers delayed notifying the
National Archives or that they obstructed efforts to get the documents back.
But until we hear any of that, we’re comparing a case of negligence to a case
of theft. Both are examples of malfeasance but only one, if proved, is a crime.
Do you
trust American voters to grasp that distinction, particularly those who are
motivated for political reasons to see no distinction at all?
***
After the
news about Biden broke, some optimistic anti-Trumpers took to speculating that the
differences between his sin and Trump’s were so vast that the news would
actually hurt Trump more than it would help
him. The media now
had an excuse to revisit the Mar-a-Lago saga and describe at length how much
worse Trump’s behavior was, they theorized.
To which
I say: Have we learned nothing from the last seven years?
Every
Trump scandal is an implicit invitation to the right to find examples of
liberals behaving badly in the same vein on the theory that there’s no vice in
living down to the political standards of one’s enemies. (Indeed, that it’s
weak and foolish not to do so.) The point isn’t to hold Trump’s antagonists
accountable for their errors, it’s to make it harder for his antagonists to
hold him accountable for his. That’s why a certain type of right-winger can’t
talk about January 6 without mentioning Stacey Abrams’ election denialism or
the fact that a few House Democrats inevitably object whenever a Republican wins the Electoral
College. It’s less that they’re grievously offended by Abrams or those
Democrats than that they’re keen to protect their guy from being held
accountable for his obviously greater malfeasance.
That
same sort of moral leveling will happen with the two document scandals. The
former president took classified documents, the current president took
classified documents. What’s left to discuss?
Trump
has already set the tone for the Republican response. Mixed in with tributes to
Ashli Babbitt and calls for brinkmanship with the debt ceiling on his Truth Social feed last night was this response to the Biden
news.
The
search at Mar-a-Lago that he never fails to describe dramatically as a “raid”
was carried out by FBI agents dressed in polos and khakis, hoping not to make a scene that
would inflame the public. (Ever the political arsonist, it was Trump himself,
not the DOJ, who announced that the search had taken
place.) And it’s
unclear why he thinks the FBI should feel obliged to “raid” Biden’s homes
absent probable cause to believe he’s holding back other documents from them.
Not every former official knowingly conceals hundreds of classified documents
for literally years, it may surprise him to know.
But it
doesn’t matter. You can see already how this is going to go politically.
“What’s the difference in what President Trump did versus what we now know
President Biden did?” Rep. James Comer, the new chair of the House
Oversight Committee, wondered after the news broke on Monday night. “We want to
know exactly what documents were taken by both President Trump and now
President Biden and want to know if they’re gonna treat President Biden any
differently than they treated President Trump.” Kevin McCarthy suggested that our current
president, being an old hand in Washington, should actually be held to a higher
standard than a government novice like his predecessor. “President Trump had
never been in office before and had just left, came out. Here’s an individual
who spent his last 40 years in office,” he said of Biden. “It just shows that
they were trying to be political with President Trump.”
At last
check Trump was speculating wildly that Chinese money is funding the Penn Biden
Center and therefore it must be the case that Biden was selling secrets to the Chinese.
After
MAGA candidates went belly up in the midterms and Trump’s polling began to
soften, I started thinking that being indicted for concealing documents might
not rally Republicans to him after all. They did rally to him after the
Mar-a-Lago search, with even rivals like Ron DeSantis forced to hyperventilate
indignantly on his behalf about “the Regime” to prove their MAGA loyalty,
but the growing perception that he’s become a liability to the party pointed to
a different reaction this year if he were charged. Some right-wing voters torn
between Trump and DeSantis might seize on the news of an indictment
opportunistically to justify switching from the old guy to the new guy. “It’s a
shame how the DOJ is railroading Trump. But now he has so much baggage …”
Last
night’s revelations about Biden are making me rethink that. The stakes of the
document scandal have been reframed from “Trump or DeSantis?” to “Trump versus
Biden.” Many Republicans who otherwise would have been willing, however
grudgingly, to hold an indictment against him will now decide for tribal
partisan reasons that they can’t do that in good conscience if Biden isn’t
indicted as well. Otherwise they’ll be siding with the “deep state” against
Trump in a flagrant case of political double standards.
Case in point: Given his presidential aspirations, few people have more to gain than Mike Pence by making sure that voters know what Trump did was worse than what Biden did, at least based on the information currently available. Yet there Pence was on Tuesday morning, dutifully muddying the waters in an interview. Conservative media will be wall-to-wall with stuff like this the moment a Trump indictment is handed down, needless to say:
Before
you know it, it’ll be MAGA canon that what Biden did was actually worse than
what Trump did. And Trump, being Trump, will insist that Republicans in good
standing toe that line going forward.
That’s
not to say that Jack Smith and the DOJ won’t indict him. The title of this
column is in error, hopefully; Smith should move forward if probable cause
exists irrespective of the political consequences. I also think it’s shrewd of
Merrick Garland to have tapped the U.S. attorney in Chicago—a Trump appointee—to review the Biden matter, as any
decision not to prosecute will have a bit more bipartisan legitimacy as a result.
But we all understand, I trust, that the task of convincing Americans that
Trump has committed some singular wrong that requires prosecution is
considerably harder than it was even 24 hours ago. In a society where everyone
gets their political news a la carte, prepared precisely to their taste, it’s
all too easy to whip up a dish in which Trump and Biden are guilty of the same
thing. I don’t know that Merrick Garland will want to move forward in those
circumstances, given what doing so would do to institutional trust in the DOJ.
Oh
well. There’s always Georgia.
***
I’ll
give Trump and his defenders this much in closing. I think it’s fair to ask why
the White House sat on this news for two months.
Remember,
Biden’s lawyers discovered the documents at the Penn Biden Center on November
2, less than a week before the midterms. Only now are we learning of it. Why?
“The
National Archives had no obligation to announce the discovery,” you might say.
Okay. But didn’t the White House have an obligation?
The
president had just been implicated in a dereliction of duty involving national
security. At first blush, that dereliction looks minor. It was probably
negligent, not criminal. But given all the scrutiny of how Trump and Hillary
Clinton mishandled classified information, it’s not unreasonable to think Biden
should have been transparent and let his constituents know that he too had been
slippery with sensitive material.
He chose
to wait until after a momentous election that decided which party would govern
the new Congress to share the news. Go figure.
The
excuse that’ll be made, I assume, is that the White House didn’t want to
complicate a pending Justice Department investigation by throwing it into a
white-hot political spotlight. Trump fans will cry foul, demanding to know why
we learned instantly of the Mar-a-Lago search by comparison. But again, it
wasn’t the DOJ that first confirmed that the search had happened. It was Trump.
He wanted the public to know what was happening, believing wayward right-wing
populists would rally behind him on the news ahead of 2024. Whereas Biden,
knowing how swing voters might react to a pre-midterm bombshell about his own
document scandal, decided to bite his tongue for a while.
Whether the sitting president should feel entitled to keep secret a federal probe in which he might be a target I leave to the reader to decide.
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