Has William Barr gone full MAGA?
Good morning. Iâm Paul Thornton, and it is Saturday, Feb. 15, 2020. Letâs take a look back at the week in Opinion.
A long, long time ago, just after Democrats had been swept into power in the House and none of us realized just how much weâd miss the recently fired Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, the L.A. Times Editorial Board urged the Senate to âconfirm William Barr, even though it requires a leap of faith.â That leap of faith was on the question of whether Barr would protect Justice Department special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and make the contents of his report public.
If only anyone knew how long of a jump weâd need.
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Since then, the attorney general has misled the public about the conclusions of the Mueller report before releasing most of its contents, alleged that the Trump campaign was the target of âspying,â appointed a U.S. attorney to examine the origins of the Russia investigation and most recently undermined his own prosecutors who recommended a seven- to nine-year prison sentence for former Trump advisor Roger Stone. Hereâs what the editorial board says now about the attorney general it reluctantly supported for confirmation two years ago:
âThe Justice Department said officials made the decision to change the sentencing recommendation before Trumpâs tweet, and Trump himself said Tuesday that âI have not been involved in it at all.â But skepticism is understandable, given Trumpâs demonstrated disrespect for the impartial administration of justice and his past actions, including his documented efforts to impede the investigation of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.
âThat is why the Justice Departmentâs inspector general must investigate this episode and why Atty. Gen. William Barr needs to be open about the chain of events when he testifies before the House Judiciary Committee next month.
âOn Wednesday, Trump congratulated Barr âfor taking charge of a case that was totally out of control and perhaps should not have even been brought.â The burden is on Barr to prove that the Justice Department wasnât doing the presidentâs bidding.â
The Justice Departmentâs independence has been massacred. Columnist Virginia Heffernan was much more unsparing in her criticism than the editorial board, saying that this episode âconfirmed Barr as nothing but a butler to the squalling Trump, adding to his cover-up of the true contents of the Mueller report, which, guess what, did not exonerate the president.â Readers have been similarly strident in response to the latest Trump administration scandal.
That feeling when a week-old editorial seems like it was written a year ago: Days after Trump was acquitted in his Senate impeachment trial, the editorial board lamented the hyper-partisanship that took root long before this president took office. Since then, itâs safe to say that concerns over worsening tribalism in politics have given way to fears of outright corruption of the Justice Department after impeachment. L.A. Times
Itâs easy to forget thereâs a presidential campaign going on â several of them, to be more accurate. Sen. Bernie Sanders may be heading into South Carolina and Nevada atop the crowded Democratic field with two victories (or near-victories, depending on how you tally the results in Iowa), but editorial writer Scott Martelle points out an important caveat: The âmoderatesâ in the Democratic primary together received a much larger share of votes in New Hampshire than the self-identified democratic socialist. L.A. Times
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Whatâs the best medicine for heart disease? Being rich. Common killers like Alzheimerâs and many forms of cancer still lack effective treatments; not so with heart disease, but medications that fight high cholesterol, high blood pressure and diabetes arenât reaching people who live in certain ZIP codes or below certain income levels. âNot only must clinicians advocate for patients at their bedsides; they need to put pressure on elected officials to expand access to healthcare,â writes cardiologist Haider Warraich. âA healthy heart should be a right, not a privilege.â L.A. Times
Liberals, stop mocking Trump â it emboldens him, makes his supporters feel attacked and reduces your effectiveness at fighting his policies, writes Barry Glassner. He proposes a different line of attack: âInstead of an unflattering photo of the president, use a clip of his son Eric proclaiming in an interview last fall that âthe government saves a fortuneâ when his father stays at one of his own properties. âWe charge them, like 50 bucks,â he said. Juxtapose that with a headline from the Washington Post last week: âSecret Service has paid rates as high as $650 a night for rooms at Trumpâs properties.ââ L.A. Times
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A cure for the common opinion
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You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.