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Jonah Goldberg: Republicans wanted Clinton prosecuted for her emails. And now they defend Trump? | TribLIVE.com
Jonah Goldberg, Columnist

Jonah Goldberg: Republicans wanted Clinton prosecuted for her emails. And now they defend Trump?

Jonah Goldberg
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Rep. Jim Jordan, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, strikes the gavel to start a hearing on U.S. border issues on Capitol Hill Feb. 1.

In the wake of Donald Trump’s latest indictment, two basic defenses have been offered: He did nothing wrong, and it doesn’t matter that he did anything wrong.

So far, most of his defenders are more comfortable making the latter argument.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is one of the few exceptions. On CNN, Jordan argued that Trump did nothing wrong by keeping extremely sensitive classified information next to a toilet, among other places, because the president “can classify and he can control access to national security information however he wants.”

It’s based on a theory of presidential prerogatives. But it has at least one fatal flaw: Trump isn’t the president. Jordan, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, sidesteps this point, saying he takes Trump “at his word” that he “mentally” declassified everything before leaving office, even though there’s an actual tape of Trump saying that he didn’t.

Most Republicans don’t have the fortitude for such brazen Stakhanovite defenses of Comrade Trump. After all, even his former attorney general, William Barr, says the indictment is “very, very, damning” and that Trump is “toast” if even half of it is true.

The more widespread argument among Republicans is a variant of anti-anti- Trumpism. Specifically: Prosecuting Trump would be wrong because Hillary Clinton wasn’t prosecuted in 2016 for her email misbehavior or because Joe Biden hasn’t been prosecuted for mishandling classified documents.

Hence, the Trump loyalists insist, we have a “two-tiered” system of justice. This, of course, leaves out the fact that Biden and Clinton (and Mike Pence) cooperated with the Justice Department, while Trump is accused, in full and exhausting detail, of obstructing the investigation.

Still, I think these arguments have some merit. Some Trump defenders often overstate or misstate the facts, but I believe that Clinton’s private email server scheme was outrageous, and it would have been better if FBI Director James Comey had recommended that she be charged instead of declining to do so.

Clinton’s behavior and the Comey investigation were examples of institutional failure that laid a lot of the groundwork for the ugly politics of the last seven years, including Trump’s election.

Indeed, the sorry chapter of Clinton’s emails is part of a broader dysfunctional pattern in our political culture. Partisans rarely worry about the effect their behavior ultimately invites in their opponents. Politically, the process by which bad behavior becomes a bad precedent is when the other party says, “Oh, so we can do that too when we’re in power.”

Think of it this way: I believe it is outrageous that O.J. Simpson was acquitted of murdering his ex-wife and her friend. But that doesn’t mean that when I murder someone, I get to say, “You can’t send me to prison! O.J. Simpson got away with it!” The government falls short of ideals and standards all the time. That’s not an argument for getting rid of ideals and standards.

This is the blind spot of Trump defenders. It elides over the very possibility that Trump actually is guilty. If you think that Clinton’s behavior was comparably bad to Trump’s, the reaction can’t be, “So he should get away with it too.” Yet, that seems to be the GOP response now. Because she skirted the rules, they insist, we shouldn’t have rules. Because Trump cannot clear the standard conservatives held Clinton to, we shouldn’t have standards. Where does that leave us?

Jonah Goldberg is editor-in-chief of The Dispatch and the host of The Remnant podcast. His Twitter handle is @JonahDispatch

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Categories: Jonah Goldberg Columns | Opinion
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