Stephen Crowley/The New York Times |
Let’s begin with what the public can know for certain. President Trump had no evidence on Saturday morning when he smeared his predecessor, President Barack Obama, accusing him of ordering that Trump Tower phones be tapped during the 2016 campaign. Otherwise, the White House would not be scrambling to find out if what he said is true.
Just contemplate the
recklessness — the sheer indifference to truth and the moral authority of the
American presidency — revealed here: one president baselessly charging
criminality by another, all in a childish Twitter rampage.
The Times reported
on Sunday that the F.B.I. director, James Comey, was so alarmed by Mr. Trump’s
fact-free claim — which implicitly accused the F.B.I. of breaking the law by
wiretapping an American citizen at a president’s behest — that he was asking
the Justice Department to publicly call it false. In other words, the F.B.I.
director was demanding that Justice officially declare the president to be
misleading the public.
This is a dangerous moment,
which requires Congress and members of this administration to look beyond
partisan maneuvering and tend to the health of the democracy itself.
In four tweets,
capped by one about Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
“pathetic” ratings on Celebrity Apprentice, Mr. Trump declared as fact a theory
he apparently encountered on alt-right websites: “How low has President Obama
gone to tapp [sic] my phones during the very sacred election process. This is
Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!”
Mr. Obama issued a
statement saying that neither he “nor any White House official ever ordered
surveillance on any U.S. citizen.” James Clapper, the former director of
national intelligence, denied on Sunday that the government had wiretapped
Trump Tower before the election, and said he had no knowledge of any effort to
do so before Mr. Obama left office.
The background for
Mr. Trump’s outburst is, of course, the F.B.I.’s investigation of his inner
circle’s contacts with Russian intelligence. It would be highly unusual for a
president to be privy to details of a law enforcement investigation targeting
his associates, let alone targeting him. If the inquiry is primarily a
counterespionage investigation, however, he might properly have been briefed on
it. Not much is known about this inquiry. The mere fact that a new
administration is being investigated for potentially colluding with Moscow is
uncharted territory.
Mr. Trump is now trying to bootstrap his claims into a
congressional investigation of the Obama administration. On Sunday Sean Spicer,
his press secretary, issued a statement demanding that congressional
intelligence committees, led by Republicans friendly toward Mr. Trump,
“determine whether executive branch investigative powers were abused in 2016.”
Representative Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence and a member of Mr. Trump’s transition team, quickly made clear he
intended to do the president’s bidding.
Congressional
leaders need to act more forthrightly than that to safeguard public confidence
in government. By alleging potential criminality in the nation’s highest
office, Mr. Trump has tweeted himself into a corner. His accusation is so
sensational — so explosive if it turned out to have some basis in fact and so
corrosive if not — that Congress has no credible option but to convene a
bipartisan select committee to investigate all questions related to Russian
interference in the election. And if Mr. Trump has confidence in his claim, he
should have no reluctance about the appointment of an independent counsel to
get to the bottom of the Russia affair.
As for those senior
officials of this administration who have integrity: It is past time for them
to begin asking themselves if they can continue lending their names and
exposing their reputations to a president with so little regard for democratic
institutions, and for the truth.
Please go here for
the original article: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/05/opinion/when-one-president-smears-another.html
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