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Browsing Tag: Sean Sullivan

More Profiles in Courage. Not.

October 2017.

     With the indictments in late October 2017 of Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, as well as the guilty plea of “coffee boy” George Papadopoulos for false statements to the FBI, it became more difficult for GOP luminaries to call the Mueller investigation baseless.  This did nothing to whet their appetite to hold forth publicly.  The fear of offending The Grand Pooh Bah was well ingrained a year into the Trump era.

The Washington Post detailed the evasions concocted by the Republicans and their craven reluctance to face the press.  The letter comments on these proclivities sarcastically.

Here’s the article by Karoun Demirjian and Sean Sullivan:

Karoun Demirjian and Sean Sullivan, “GOP Leaders’ Strategy:  Avoidance,” The Washington Post, 31 October 2017, A6 (www.washingtonpost.com/wp-stat/tablet/v1.1/20171031/A06_RE_EZ_DAILY_20171031.pdf).

Here’s the letter:

“The GOP’s Disheartening Response,” The Washington Post, 3 November 2017, A20 (www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-gops-disheartening-lack-of-courage/2017/11/02/f362e084-bf4b-11e7-9294-705f80164f6e_story.html).

The Extended Cut.

Editors have been gentle in tweaking my submissions; however, a phrase was dropped from this letter, probably because it’s pretentiously obnoxious.  The obnoxiousness warrants its preservation.  Here’s the unredacted sentence:

     “GOP senators and congressmen, many of whom doubtless see Churchill or Thatcher in the mirror during their morning ablutions, offer a dispiriting spectacle. . .”

Profiles in Courage. Not.

May 2017.

     An open question during the first days of the Trump administration began to be answered early on.  The fallout from the exile of FBI Director James Comey was clarifying.  Hard on the heels of Mr. Comey’s dismissal it emerged that The Dear Leader possibly divulged classified material from Israeli sources to Russia’s US Ambassador Sergey Kislyak and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavarov.  The public then learned of His Eminence’s alleged buttonholing of Mr. Comey to press for quashing the FBI probe of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s contacts with the Russians.  Would the national Republican Party, those rock-ribbed paragons of civic rectitude, check President Golf Cart’s authoritarian and self-dealing inclinations or would they submit to and become tacitly complicit in his antics?  Would a rump of old school GOPers survive or would the Party of Trump devour the GOP tout entier?

The latter seemed more likely with each passing day.  Some critical statements came from the usual Republican suspects – Senators Bob Corker, John McCain, Lindsey Graham (as a ventriloquist’s doll), and Ben Sasse and Representative Jason Chaffetz.  From these, Mr. McCain belongs to the ages, Mr. Corker is retired, and Mr. Chaffetz fled Congress to become a Trumpy talking head on Fox News.  And there is Mr. Graham, whose spine has proven detachable.  The GOP leadership otherwise seemed determined to ignore The Fabulist in Chief’s behavior.  A Patches O’Houlihan strategy was adopted to cope with a pesky press corps:  “Dodge, duck, dip, dive, dodge.”  The letter addresses the Party of Benghazi’s hesitancy to look at these matters.

Here’s Elise Viebeck, Sean Sullivan, and Mick DeBonis’s article:

Elise Viebeck, Sean Sullivan, and Mike DeBonis, “Controversies Rattle Hill Republicans,” The Washington Post, 17 May 2017, A7 (www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/lawmakers-to-trump-turn-over-transcript-of-meeting-with-russians/2017/05/16/e9b6deb6-3a3d-11e7-9e48-c4f199710b69_story.html).

Here’s the unpublished letter:

     It is understandable that the GOP’s congressional wing is “rattled” by President Trump’s grave missteps; however, mumbling, noncommittal responses, temporizing, and inaction are no longer acceptable.

     Strong statements made by some GOP senators – Messrs. Corker, McCain, Graham, Sasse, et al. – have been welcome but these sentiments must now be translated into concrete action.  It is noteworthy that the lone GOP committee chair thus far to demand Mr. Comey’s memoranda, Mr. Chaffetz, is not seeking reelection.  Is resignation the GOP’s precondition for political courage?

     The near silence of the GOP’s congressional leadership speaks loudly.  Majority Leader McConnell should for a moment cease to be the “Bluegrass Machiavelli” and Speaker Ryan should endeavor not to live down to Charlie Pierce’s recent characterization of him as an “intellectual invertebrate” (Chris Hayes, “All In,” MSNBC, May 16, 2017).  They should jointly support the call for an independent investigation of the Russian affair and for open public testimony by Mr. Comey before the appropriate committees.  The calculus of political advantage must yield to the national interest and the people’s right to know.