Trump's Assault on Accountability
Below are a series of
Twitter posts on April 7, 2020 by Walter Shaub, the former director of the United
States Office of Government Ethics from January 9,
2013 to July 19, 2017. Shaub warns that Trump is removing everyone who can hold
him accountable and replacing them with Trump loyalists.
Trump's assault on Inspectors
General is late-stage corruption. The canary in the coal mine was the
government ethics program, which began engaging with the Trump team long before
the election. The general public got it, but too many people in positions of
influence missed it.
Then, there was the open
presidential profiteering and clues that hard-to-prove conflicts of interest
were significantly influencing policy. But Republicans in Congress ensured that
no one could dig too deeply into those, and they enabled it by refusing to
conduct oversight.
Next came Trump's tests of the
enforceability of laws--a little push against the tent wall here and a big jab
against it there, followed by even bigger tests and a growing awareness that
many laws don't have teeth or depend upon the executive branch to enforce them.
Along the way came the firings
of the two most critical law enforcement officials precisely because they
permitted investigations of Trump. The Attorney General's firing should have
triggered his removal from office. But wild-eyed Senators were hot on the trail
of more judges.
This emboldened Trump and taught
him a lesson. He had come into government unaware that "personnel is
policy." Now he both understood that and knew the Senate would let him
treat the government like The Apprentice: only the most slavishly obedient
appointees would survive.
Ordinarily, the game of musical
appointees would have concerned members of Congress, particularly as Trump
began to find replacements who didn't care about their oaths of office. But
those judges continued to excite Republican Senators, and Trump's base made
them nervous.
Oversight began only after the
Democrats took the House. But Trump's hold on the Senate was absolute. We don't
know what assurances he received behind the scenes, but we saw even longtime
Republican Senators abandon previously espoused principles to protect him in
plain sight.
With that protection, Trump
engaged in a previously unthinkable level of resistance to congressional
oversight. The collapse of this Constitutional safeguard was a potentially
mortal wound. It didn't go down without a fight, the House included
"obstruction" in his impeachment.
But the Senate has the final
say. With one exception, Republican Senators didn't even maintain a pretense of
honoring their oaths. They ended the sham impeachment trial quickly. The
failure of this second constitutional safeguard, moved the republic into a
life-or-death crisis.
What remained was the hope that whistleblowers
and witnesses could still come forward. Maybe the people could demand action—if
they knew the facts. But Republicans in Congress and their staffs, aided by
fringe media outlets, worked to terrorize a suspected whistleblower.
Witnesses faired no better. Even
some Senators who had spent their careers professing support for witnesses,
gave Trump free rein to retaliate against them too. The stakes became high
enough that whistleblowers and witnesses would henceforth think twice about
coming forward.
But Trump wasn't done. The White
House began to speak of expanding its purge beyond political appointees to
include career Feds, whose due process rights exist to prevent politicians from
harnessing them for corrupt aims or, at least, silence any who might report
wrongdoing.
The head of the Office of
Special Counsel, which protects career Feds from political retaliation,
remained silent—as did Republican Senators. Whether or not Trump follows
through, the mere threat pressures career Feds to put loyalty to Trump above
loyalty to the Constitution.
Individual government officials
may have the moral fiber and ethics to resist the pressure. But the legal
safeguards that help the federal workforce as a whole remain loyal to the
American people and the rule of law over a rogue politician have been weakened.
That's dangerous.
A last line of defense in this
war on ethics and law is the Inspector General community. They're the eyes of
the American people, objective investigators traditionally freed to pursue
accountability by the safeguard of bipartisan congressional protection.
But the Trump era is a bad time
for safeguards. Trump's eye has turned to the IGs, and Republican Senators have
forsaken them—no hearings, no media blitz, only a few meek chirps of mild
concern. Even the self-anointed patron saint of IGs, Chuck Grassley, has
abandoned them.
What began with the fall of the
ethics program is entering the end game with the potential fall of the
Inspector General community. The government is failing us, safeguards that took
two centuries to build have crumbled, and fascism is eyeing this republic like
lunch.
It's down to the people. There
is a chance in November to reclaim this land for democracy and reject fascism.
But the obstacles are tremendous. Trump has the advantage of incumbency,
decades of Republican voter suppression, and a third branch that increasingly
seems political.
A sign of things to come, the
Supreme Court ramped up the voter suppression by sending Wisconsin voters into
a war zone in our species' fight against an ancient enemy, disease. A global
pandemic has ground America to a halt, complicating the upcoming presidential
election.
Republican Senators are trotting
out their Hillary Clinton playbook, hoping to abuse their authority again and
wound Trump's leading political rival by Benghazi-Uranium-One-But-Her-Emailsing
him. And they've given Trump their blessing for him to solicit foreign
interference.
Trump's Attorney General has
even opened a special channel for Trump's private attorney to funnel
information from abroad to the Justice Department. Fascism is having a hell of
a day in America, and things will get much worse before November.
All is not lost. The American
people are fired up. But it'll be hard and the outcome's uncertain. That's why
I want you to understand how big a deal it is that Trump is going after
Inspectors General. This is a late-stage move in an authoritarian coup against
the rule of law.
John L. Ferri
jlferri@epix.net
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