William Barr, the new U.S. Attorney General, was confirmed two months ago. At the time, Dianne Feinstein, the Senate Judiciary Committeeās senior Democrat, was reported to have said that Barr’s refusal to commit to releasing Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report was “disqualifying”. She also said she was worried that Barr “would be unable to stand up to” the president.Ā
Brian Beutler of Crooked.comĀ suggests thatĀ Barr’s brain may have been damaged by too much exposure to Fox News. Instead of standing up to the president, he’s encouraging the creep’s worst impulses. Quote:
Barr is the common thread connecting the deceptive propaganda of Trumpās non-exoneration exoneration, and the administrationās abdication of its duty to take care that the laws of the U.S.āeven ones Trump doesnāt likeāare faithfully defended. The former required Barr to usurp Congressās role as the proper arbiter of Trumpās non-prosecutable misconduct, the latter required him to subvert his own institution, and both required him to serve Trump personally, instead of the United States. Barr plainly relished the abuses of power, even if he notionally disagreed with the strategic wisdom of making frivolous arguments in court.
But Trump has never wanted for advisers who hate Obamacare and would help him conceal his wrongdoing. What he lacked before was an attorney general who was as enthusiastically contemptuous of the rule of law as he is, and willing to compromise the ideal of non-partisan law enforcement on his behalf.
Trump has spent the entirety of his presidency bumping up against institutional restraints, determined to jump them.
The notion that the conservative establishment had erected guardrails around Trump by putting āadults in the roomā with him is an artifact of the transition, when Trump had little real discretion over who would serve in his White House and cabinet. Trump undertook basically no preparation for the presidency, so when he won the election unexpectedly, he had no choice but to defer to his party, which promised to provide his fledgling administration a thin veneer of competence.
Within hours of his inauguration, Trumpās basic unfitness for office had overwhelmed these functionaries, many of whom were less āadults in the roomā than opportunists who hoped to milk their fiefdoms for all they couldāto advance Trumpās racist, kleptocratic agenda, while keeping a foot planted within the political elite, where they expected to return eventually.
Ousted Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen is the two-faced poster child for these āadults,ā none of whom are in the room anymore. Her presence like theirs wasnāt much of a restraint at all. Nielsen ripped migrant children from the arms of their parents and placed them in makeshift jails where more than one of them died. Trump lost faith in her not because she wasnāt willing to disgrace herself (she lied under oath to Congress, and committed crimes against humanity that will make traveling abroad a dicey proposition for the rest of her life), but because she wouldnāt defy court orders and black-letter law.
Trump purged Nielsen and the rest of her departmentās senior leadership reportedly because he became convinced that more committed, less careerist officials would help him assert dictatorial power. But itās hard to fathom that Barrās arrival and his demonstrations of loyalty had nothing to do with the decision. Trump could have made his move at any time, but he did it now at the worst possible time for disruption, for a reason.
Itās possible that Barr would draw the line at Trumpās suggestion that border agents ignore immigration judges, but we canāt blame Trump for thinking otherwise.
Having declared Trumpās legal innocence andĀ concealed the Mueller report for him, Barr has now turned his talents to providing the administration flimsy legal cover for violating the law that requires the Treasury Department to turn Trumpās tax returns over to Congress. He appeared before the Senate Wednesday to claim Obama administration officials had engaged in āspyingā on the Trump campaign, and now threatens to take punitive action against them.
The political establishmentās hope that Barr would serve as a new adult in the room to replace departed ones was always misplaced. He first gained notoriety as the George H.W. Bush attorney general who completed the Iran Contra coverup, and came to Trumpās attention by writing an unsolicited memo that disparaged the Russia investigation and asserted presidents canāt obstruct justice in the course of their official conduct. In between he worked in private practice, but also seems to have allowed conservative propaganda to rot his brain. In 2017 heĀ emailedNew York TimesĀ reporter Peter Baker to declare, āI have long believed that the predicate for investigating the uranium deal, as well as the [Clinton] foundation, is far stronger than any basis for investigating so-called ācollusion,āā which is something only a person overfed on a diet of Fox News would say. Reviving the debunked SPYGATE conspiracy theory is no different, except he now controls the Justice Department where he can substitute Trumpās ravings and lies and authoritarian predilections for the rule of law.
Trump has noticed, and is adjusting to a new, less constrained, far more dangerous phase of his presidency.
Unquote.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi responded to Barr’s recent behavior:
āLet me just say, Iām very, very dismayed and disappointed that the chief law enforcement officer of our country is going off the rails yesterday and today,ā Pelosi told reporters at a Democratic Party retreat in Virginia.
āHe is attorney general of the United States of America, not the attorney general of Donald Trump.ā
So far, that isn’t true. He’s doing the job he was hired to do: protect his boss, not the United States.