Ignatius: Firing Mueller wont go well for Trump or rule of law
Forewarned is forearmed. So perhaps the country is lucky that President Trumps allies have floated the possibility that he might fire special counsel Robert Mueller. This speculation allows citizens to reflect on the consequences of such an action.
Trump has already taken the country to a darker place than even his sharpest critics would have imagined six months ago. He has brought to the White House the values of a failed Atlantic City casino owner turned reality-TV star. We dont have to believe former FBI Director James Comeys account of Trumps threats and blandishments. We can just watch the news and follow our Twitter feeds to see that, in many of his public statements, Trump has been deceitful.
Trump creates his own version of normal. So lets briefly review this most abnormal chain of events: The president was informed on Jan. 26 that the FBI was investigating his national security adviser, Michael Flynn. The next day, Comey says Trump summoned him to dinner to ask for his loyalty. Trump decided he had to fire Flynn on Feb. 13, saying even as he did so that Flynn had done nothing wrong and shouldnt be punished. (Message: Ill protect you.) He allegedly told Comey the next day, I hope you can let this go.
After Comey didnt let it go, Trump fired him too. He initially gave a false explanation about why, and then admitted it was because of the Russia thing and apparently bragged about it to the visiting Russian foreign minister. What is Trump so afraid of in the Russia investigation? Truly, we dont know. But as prosecutors sometimes say about those under investigation: We may not know what he did wrong, but he does.
Trumps behavior in office has been disruptive, to put it mildly. But with the appointment of Mueller, the near-universally praised former FBI director, it seemed the country would have a chance to take a breath and return to something like normal order. But no. The presidents friends are now pressing the argument that Mueller must go, too. If so, this crippling scandal could veer into a much more dangerous phase of presidential lawlessness.
Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard Law professor who headed the Justice Departments Office of Legal Counsel during the George W. Bush administration, offered a careful assessment of the consequences of a Mueller firing early Tuesday on the Lawfare blog. His preface struck the right note of astonishment that were even discussing this topic: This seems like such a bad idea for the nation, and for the president that I have a hard time believing it is a live possibility.
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