Instead of retelling the situation of the circus in Congress - with buckets of KFC and props of a plastic chicken - this week, I'm going to let the Wall Street Journal provide the details.
May 5th Update: Having found confirmation of what I thought was the case regarding A.G. Barr checking with Mueller about his report summary, here's the truth of it. Especially revealing are the paragraphs in the center of the article.
So, while the liberals are doing their best to save their asses by framing the narrative with accusations that the A.G. was covering up something by putting out his summary before anyone had a chance to go through Mueller's two volumes, their using the old play book tactic of obfuscating and distracting the real issue in order to keep feeding their support base with more lies.
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WSJ today - 5/02/19
REVIEW & OUTLOOK
A Real Attorney General
Washington
pile-ons are never pretty, but this week’s political setup of Attorney
General William Barr is disreputable even by Beltway
standards. Democrats and the media are turning the AG into a villain
for doing his duty and making the hard decisions that special counsel
Robert Mueller abdicated.
Mr.
Barr’s Wednesday testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee was
preceded late Tuesday by the leak of a letter Mr. Mueller had sent the
AG on March 27. Mr. Mueller griped in the letter that Mr. Barr’s
four-page explanation to Congress of the principal conclusions of the
Mueller report on March 24 “did not fully capture the context, nature,
and substance” of the Mueller team’s “work and conclusions.” Only in
Washington could this exercise in posterior covering be puffed into a
mini-outrage.
Democrats
leapt on the letter as proof that Mr. Barr was somehow covering for
Donald Trump when he has covered up nothing. Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono,
the Democratic answer to Rep. Louie Gohmert, accused Mr. Barr of abusing
his office and lying to Congress, and demanded that he resign. The only
thing she lacked was evidence.
Mr.
Barr’s four-page letter couldn’t possibly have covered all the nuances
of a 448-page report. It was an attempt to provide Mr. Mueller’s
conclusions to Congress and the public as quickly as possible, while he
took the time to work through the entire document to make redactions
required by law and Justice Department rules.
This
is exactly what he promised to do in his confirmation hearing. Even Mr.
Mueller’s complaining letter admits that Mr. Barr’s letter wasn’t
inaccurate, a fact Mr. Barr says Mr. Mueller also conceded in a
subsequent phone call. The Mueller complaint, rather, was that there was
“public confusion about critical aspects” of his investigation.
Translation:
Republicans were claiming vindication for Donald Trump, and Mr. Mueller
was taking hits in the press for not nailing the worst President in
history. Having been hailed for months as a combination of Eliot Ness
and St. Thomas More, Mr. Mueller and his team of prosecutors seem to
have been unnerved by some bad press clips.
Mr.
Barr told the Senate Wednesday that he offered Mr. Mueller the chance
to review his four-page letter before sending it to Congress, but the
special counsel declined. Mr. Mueller worked for Mr. Barr, and that was
the proper time to offer suggestions or disagree. Instead, Mr. Mueller
ducked that responsibility and then
griped in an ex-post-facto letter that was conveniently leaked on the eve of
Bill Barr gets smeared for refusing to duck and cover like Loretta Lynch.
Mr.
Barr’s testimony. Quite the stand-up guy. Mr. Barr has since released
the full Mueller report with minor redactions, as he promised, and with
the “context” intact. Keep in mind Mr. Barr was under no legal
obligation to release anything at all. Mr. Mueller reports only to Mr.
Barr, not to the country or Congress.
Mr.
Barr has also made nearly all of the redactions in the report available
to senior Members of Congress to inspect at Justice. Yet as of this
writing, only three Members have bothered— Senate Judiciary Chairman
Lindsey Graham, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and ranking House
Republican on Judiciary Doug Collins. Not one Democrat howling about
Mr. Barr’s lack of transparency has examined the outrages they claim are
hidden.
Democrats
are also upset that Mr. Barr concluded that Mr. Trump did not obstruct
justice regarding the Russia probe. But in that decision too Mr. Barr
was behaving as an Attorney General should. Mr. Mueller compiled a
factual record but shrank from a “prosecutorial judgment.” Mr. Barr then
stepped up and made the call, however unpopular with Democrats and the
press.
***
Contrast
that to the abdication of Loretta Lynch, who failed as Barack Obama’s
last Attorney General to make a prosecutorial judgment about Hillary
Clinton’s misuse of classified information. Ms. Lynch cowered before the
bullying of then FBI director James Comey, who absolved Mrs. Clinton of
wrongdoing while publicly scolding her. That egregious break with
Justice policy eventually led Mr. Comey to reopen the Clinton probe in
late October 2016, which helped to elect Mr. Trump.
All
of this shows again the risks of appointing special counsels. They lack
the political accountability that the Founders built into the
separation of powers. Mr. Mueller, in his March 27 letter, revealed
again that like Mr. Comey at the FBI he viewed himself as accountable
only to himself.
This
trashing of Bill Barr shows how frustrated and angry Democrats continue
to be that the special counsel came up empty in his Russia collusion
probe. He was supposed to be their fast-track to impeachment. Now
they’re left trying to gin up an obstruction tale, but the probe wasn’t
obstructed and there was no underlying crime. So they’re shouting and
pounding the table against Bill Barr for acting like a real Attorney
General.
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