5/19/2017 - Pat Buchanan Townhall.com
"With
the stroke of a pen, Rod Rosenstein redeemed his reputation," writes Dana
Milbank of The Washington Post.
What had
Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein done to be welcomed home by the Post like
the prodigal son?
Without
consulting the White House, he sandbagged President Trump, naming a special
counsel to take over the investigation of the Russia connection that could
prove ruinous to this presidency.
Rod has
reinvigorated a tired 10-month investigation that failed to find any collusion
between Trump and Russian hacking of the DNC. Not a single indictment had come
out of the FBI investigation.
Yet, now a
new special counsel, Robert Mueller, former director of the FBI, will slow-walk
his way through this same terrain again, searching for clues leading to
potentially impeachable offenses. What seemed to be winding down for Trump is
now only just beginning to gear up.
Also to be
investigated is whether the president tried to curtail the FBI investigation
with his phone calls and Oval Office meetings with FBI Director James Comey,
before abruptly firing Comey last week.
Regarded as
able and honest, Mueller will be under media pressure to come up with charges.
Great and famous prosecutors are measured by whom they convict and how many
scalps they take.
Moreover, a
burgeoning special counsel's office dredging up dirt on Trump and associates
will find itself the beneficiary of an indulgent press.
Why did
Rosenstein capitulate to a Democrat-media clamor for a special counsel that
could prove disastrous for the president who elevated and honored him?
Surely in
part, as Milbank writes, to salvage his damaged reputation.
After being
approved 94-6 by a Senate that hailed him as a principled and independent U.S.
attorney for both George Bush and Barack Obama, Rosenstein found himself being
pilloried for preparing the document White House aides called crucial to
Trump's decision to fire Comey.
Rosenstein
had gone over to the dark side. He had, it was said, on Trump's orders, put the
hit on Comey. Now, by siccing a special counsel on the president himself,
Rosenstein is restored to the good graces of this city. Rosenstein just turned
in his black hat for a white hat.
Democrats
are hailing both his decision to name a special counsel and the man he chose.
Yet it is difficult to exaggerate the damage he has done.
As did
almost all of its predecessors, including those which led to the resignation of
President Nixon and impeachment of Bill Clinton, Mueller's investigation seems
certain to drag on for years.
All that
time, there will be a cloud over Trump's presidency that will drain his
political authority. Trump's enemies will become less fearful and more vocal.
Republican Congressmen and Senators in swing states and marginal districts,
looking to 2018, will have less incentive to follow Trump's lead, rather than
their own instincts and interests. Party unity will fade away.
And without
a united and energized Republican Party on the Hill, how do you get repeal and
replacement of Obamacare, tax reform or a border wall? Trump's agenda suddenly
seems comatose. And was it a coincidence that the day Mueller was appointed,
the markets tanked, with the Dow falling 372 points?
Markets had
soared with Trump's election on the expectation that his pro-business agenda
would be enacted. If those expectations suddenly seem illusory, will the boom
born of hope become a bust?
A White
House staff, said to be in disarray, and a president reportedly enraged over
endless press reports of his problems and falling polls, are not going to
become one big happy family again with a growing office of prosecutors and FBI
agents poking into issues in which they were involved.
Nor is the
jurisdiction of the special counsel restricted to alleged Russia interference
in the campaign. Allegations about Trump's taxes, investments, and associates,
and those of his family, could be drawn into the maw of the special counsel's
office by political and business enemies enthusiastic about seeing him brought
down.
More folks
in Trump's entourage will soon be lawyering up.
While it's
absurd today to talk of impeachment, that will not deter Democrats and the
media from speculating, given what happened to Nixon and Clinton when special
prosecutors were put on their trail.
Another
consequence of the naming of a special counsel, given what such investigations
have produced, will be that Vice President Pence will soon find himself with
new friends and admirers, and will begin to attract more press as the man of
the future in the GOP.
A rising
profile for Pence is unlikely to strengthen his relationship with a besieged
president.
In the
United Kingdom, the odds are growing that Trump may not finish his term.
So how does
he regain the enthusiasm and energy he exhibited in previous crises, with such
talk in the air? A debilitating and potentially dangerous time for President
Trump has now begun, courtesy of his deputy attorney general.
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