Opinion

Opinion: The president brought it on himself

By Jay Bookman
June 16, 2017

This week, we learned that special counsel Robert Mueller has expanded the scope of his probe, bringing President Donald Trump personally under investigation for attempting to obstruct justice.

The president responded to the news in his typically restrained, understated fashion, proclaiming himself the victim of the greatest witch hunt in American political history. Others picked up the theme. As the dependably fawning Newt Gingrich put it, Mueller’s decision “tells you how arrogant the deep state is and how confident it is it can get away with anything.”

Robert Mueller shown on Feb. 16, 2011 as he testifies before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing in Washington, D.C.
Robert Mueller shown on Feb. 16, 2011 as he testifies before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing in Washington, D.C.

The problem with such claims is, well, reality. The reality is that any prosecutor — local, state or federal — who stumbled across evidence of possible obstruction would have done exactly the same thing that Mueller has done. Given the obvious evidence of obstruction — much of it public and provided by Trump himself — he or she would have no choice.

Let’s review:

In short, Trump has clearly, repeatedly attempted to obstruct justice. And the same basic lack of self-control that caused him to commit that act in plain sight also led to his public confessions to doing so. So Gingrich aside, if any “deep state” put Trump in this predicament, it has been his own deep state of entitlement.

About the Author

Jay Bookman

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