By
William P. Barr
Monday,
June 19, 2023
He’s
the victim. Since
President Trump was indicted in Florida last week, those of us who read and
listen to conservative media have heard that singular message. The longer
version goes like this: he’s the victim of a political witch hunt being carried
out by the deep state during a presidential campaign in order to take out the
Republican front-runner.
If
anyone is sympathetic to this kind of logic, it’s me.
Trump
has been the victim of witch hunts by obsessive enemies willing to do anything
to bring him down. On those occasions—most prominently Russiagate, and more recently the civil and criminal actions against him in New
York—I have never shied away from defending him. As his attorney general, I
witnessed firsthand the unfair and venomous treatment he, and those in his
administration, often received.
It is
also true, as I know well, that Trump is a deeply flawed, incorrigible man who
frequently brings calamity on himself and the country through his dishonesty
and self-destructive recklessness. Even his supporters, who can’t help but
acknowledge that he is own worst enemy, know it.
For the
sake of the country, our party, and a basic respect for the truth, it is time
that Republicans come to grips with the hard truths about President Trump’s
conduct and its implications. Chief among them: Trump’s indictment is not the
result of unfair government persecution. This is a situation entirely of his
own making. The effort to present Trump as a victim in the Mar-a-Lago
document affair is cynical political propaganda.
Here are
the plain facts.
The
Documents
On
leaving office, Trump illegally removed from the White House hundreds of some
of the most sensitive national defense documents that the country possesses.
These include information on the defense capabilities of the U.S. and foreign
countries; our country’s nuclear programs; potential vulnerabilities of the
U.S. and our allies; and plans for potential retaliation against foreign attack.
His handling of these documents in bathrooms and ballrooms at Mar-a-Lago was
lawless and exposed the country to intolerable risk. The government had
every right—indeed, it had no choice—but to retrieve this material.
The U.S.
National Archives and the DOJ acted with restraint in trying to do so, giving
Trump every opportunity to resolve the matter discreetly for more than a year.
But he stonewalled. He ignored his advisers’ repeated warnings that he was
playing with fire. The indictment describes in detail how Trump
flouted and deceitfully obstructed a grand jury subpoena for the documents by
lying to his lawyer and playing a shell game to hide many of the documents. If
true, that conduct was a flagrant crime that cannot be excused.
Why
would Trump risk the safety of the American people by hanging on to these
documents in the face of the government’s lawful demands for their return? As
trophies? Because he thought it was a fun party trick? Because he thought it
would be cool to show off to houseguests? Or simply because he thought he could
get away with it? Knowing him, it was an act of self-assertion merely to
gratify his ego.
Some
have tried to frame this affair as a simple custody dispute over documents.
Trump’s apologists have conjured up bizarre arguments that the Presidential
Records Act, a
statute meant to prohibit former presidents from removing official documents
from the White House, should be interpreted as giving Trump carte blanche to
remove whatever he wants, even if it is unquestionably an official
document.
These
justifications are not only farcical, they are beside the point. They ignore
the central reason the former president was indicted: his calculated and
deceitful obstruction of a grand jury subpoena.
That
Trump had no right to remove national defense documents from the White House is
beyond debate. These documents are the very quintessence of the materials that
the law expressly forbids an outgoing president from taking with him. Under the
Presidential Records Act, when there is a change in administrations, official
documents related to the conduct of government business must remain under ownership,
custody, and control of the government. The only documents a departing
president is allowed to
take with him
are “purely private” documents unrelated to official duties, such as “diaries,
journals, or other personal notes. . . which are not prepared or
utilized for, or circulated or communicated in the course of, transacting
Government business.”
Obviously,
the documents at issue here were generated and used by defense, intelligence,
and other national security officials, and they were provided to the president
to carry out the business of the government. There is simply no universe
in which these could be deemed “purely private” papers like a diary.
That’s
why Trump’s apologists don’t even attempt to contend that the documents are
private. Instead, they advance a ludicrous argument—perhaps even crazier than
their argument that Vice President Pence could unilaterally decide the election
on January 6—that an outgoing president has absolute “discretion” to
label any document “private,” even if the document
indisputably falls outside the statutory definition of “private.”
In other
words, they are not merely saying a president has some discretion to determine
whether something gray should be treated as black or white. They are saying he
has total discretion to label something indisputably
black as white—which, if true, would obviously eviscerate the
entire Presidential Records Act. (This indefensible position is ably dismantled
by Andrew McCarthy in a series of recent National
Review pieces.)
Trump’s
Obstruction
All the
razzle-dazzle about Trump’s supposed rights under the Presidential Records Act
is a sideshow. At its core, this is an obstruction case. Trump would not have
been indicted just for taking the documents in the first place. Nor would he
have been indicted even if he delayed returning them for a period while arguing
about it.
What got
Trump criminally charged was his deceit and obstruction in responding to the
grand jury subpoena served in May 2022 after he
had stymied the government for a year.
That
subpoena sought all documents in Trump’s possession that were marked as
classified. If Trump truly thought he had a solid basis for keeping those
documents, there were easy and obvious ways he could have lawfully raised those
arguments at the time. Among other things, he could have taken legal action to
quash the subpoena or have a court declare his right to keep them.
He did
not do any of that.
Instead,
the indictment alleges, he led the government
to believe he was complying with the subpoena, telling the DOJ he was an “open
book.” At the same time, he told his own lawyer it would be “better” to tell
the DOJ there were no such documents and suggested his lawyer pluck out any
“really bad” ones before giving anything to the government. Why would Trump say
these things to his lawyer if he really thought he had a good legal basis for
keeping all the documents?
But the
pivotal fact—and what ultimately led the DOJ to charge Trump—was the
department’s conclusion that Trump personally engaged in an
outrageous course of deception to obstruct the grand jury’s inquiry. The
indictment alleges in great detail that (1) Trump led his lawyer to believe
that he would be allowed to conduct a complete search of all the boxes that
could contain the relevant documents; (2) Trump then arranged, without the
lawyer’s knowledge, for a large number of the relevant boxes to be removed from
the room to be searched, thus preventing a complete search; and (3) Trump then
caused his attorney to file a false statement with the court saying he
conducted a complete search.
If
true—and many key facts come from Trump’s own lawyer—this was brazen criminal
conduct that cannot be justified in any way.
The
“Double Standard” Argument
Sensible
Republicans don’t even try to defend Trump’s behavior. Instead, they point to
the flagrant “double standard,” arguing that it’s unfair to charge Trump when
Hillary Clinton got away scot-free during the Obama administration for
comparable behavior.
I
believe there is a double standard. And I have spoken out repeatedly about it
when I was attorney general and since.
I think
the DOJ sometimes pursues alleged wrongdoing by Republicans with far more gusto
than it does when the allegations implicate Democrats. I also agree the
differential treatment of Hillary Clinton is a good example of this. During the
Obama administration, the DOJ conducted a grossly inadequate investigation of
Clinton’s use of a private email server and the intentional destruction of that
server before the department had a sufficient chance to review it. This
deficient investigation, coupled with sweeping grants of
immunity to
the key people involved, made it impossible later to impose appropriate
accountability on those responsible.
But
while the double standard is real, responding to Trump’s indictment by
repetitively invoking this grievance is essentially a dodge. It sidesteps the
real questions raised by Trump’s behavior.
The
question is this: should Trump have been given a pass by the DOJ just because
Hillary may have been? Some of my Republican friends think the answer is yes. I
am unconvinced. It is not clear to me that giving Trump a pass would be the
best way of restoring the rule of law and putting the double standard behind
us.
This is
not a case where the government has stretched the law or manufactured an
offense, and is carrying out a hit job on someone who has really done nothing
wrong. Rather, the argument advanced by Trump’s defenders is that, even though
Trump’s conduct was indefensible and likely a serious crime, Hillary did the
same thing. And it’s unfair that Hillary got away with it.
But if
Trump engaged in the kind of brazen criminal conduct alleged, then applying the
law in his case is not unfair to him. The injustice lies in not
having applied it seven years ago to Hillary. You don’t rectify that omission
by giving future violators a free pass. You rectify it by applying the right
standard to the case at hand, and insisting it is applied to comparable cases
going forward. Here, that means ensuring the same standard is applied in the
pending investigations of Hunter Biden and President Biden’s handling of
classified documents.
In
short, giving a pass to Trump might cause more harm to the rule of law than
honestly applying the law to him. The rule of law won’t be restored by
further degrading the rule of law. As Andrew McCarthy pithily observed: “The fix for a two-tiered justice system is
not equal injustice under the law.”
An
Untenable Position
Even if
you buy the double standard argument, at most it justifies not
holding Trump accountable criminally. It does not mean that his
conduct was any less outrageous. And here is where I think too many Republicans
are falling down.
It is
one thing to argue that Trump should not face criminal liability. Fine. But the
next obvious question is whether, given his conduct, the GOP should continue to
promote him for the highest office in the land. Many Republicans are avoiding
this question and thus implicitly endorsing Trump for the presidency despite
his egregious conduct. This posture is untenable.
Many
loyal Republicans have instinctively rushed to the ramparts to defend Trump. I
understand that impulse. But with each new revelation, they look more and more
foolish. Remember when news first
broke of the
FBI search of Mar-a-Lago? The roars of Trump supporters were deafening. “Why
didn’t the government simply ask for the documents back?” Well, as it turns
out, they did ask, politely, for about a year, and they were jerked around.
Trump’s supporters then shifted tack. “Well, why didn’t they use a subpoena
first before conducting a search?” Well, as it turns out, they did issue a
subpoena, quietly and discreetly, three months before the search, and the
search was done only after the government got surveillance
video suggesting
that, in responding to the subpoena, documents had been illegally withheld. And
on and on and on.
Whenever
defending Trump is concerned, it is always prudent not to get too far out on a
limb until the facts are known. It would be wise to consider that the DOJ has
held back a lot of information, and it will be coming out in the weeks ahead.
But what we already know about Trump’s behavior is indefensible.
No comments:
Post a Comment