Washington
Examiner
So the Mueller
investigation is over.
The official “Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in
the 2016
Presidential Election” has been written, and is in the hands of
Attorney
General William Barr, who has issued a summary
of its findings. On the core mandate of
the investigation, given
to Special Counsel Mueller by Rod Rosenstein as Acting
Attorney General in May of 2017—to investigate “any links and/or
coordination
between the Russian government and individuals associated with the
campaign of
President Donald Trump”—the takeaway conclusion stated in the Mueller
report,
as quoted in the Barr summary, is that "[T]he investigation did not
establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated
with the
Russian government in its election interference activities.1"
In the
footnote indicated at the end of
that sentence, Barr further clarifies the comprehensive meaning of that
conclusion, again quoting the Report’s own words: “In assessing
potential
conspiracy charges, the Special Counsel also considered whether members
of the
Trump campaign ‘coordinated’ with Russian election interference
activities. The
Special Counsel defined ‘coordination’ as an ‘agreement—tacit or
express—between the Trump Campaign and the Russian government on
election
interference’."
Barr
restates the point of the cited
conclusion from the Mueller Report a number of times: “The Special
Counsel's
investigation did not find that the Trump campaign or anyone associated
with it
conspired or coordinated with Russia in its efforts to influence the
2016 U.S.
presidential election…the Special Counsel did not find that any U.S.
person or
Trump campaign official or associate conspired or knowingly coordinated
with
the IRA [Internet Research Agency, the indicted Russian clickbait
operation] in
its efforts.”
Thus, the
Mueller investigation found no
“conspiracy,” no “coordination,”—i.e., no “collusion”—“tacit or
express”
between the Trump campaign or any
U.S. person and the Russian
government. The Mueller investigation did not make, seal, or recommend
any
indictment for any U.S. person for any such crime.
This is
as clear and forceful a
repudiation as one can get of the “collusion” narrative that has been
insistently shoved down our throats by the Democratic Party, its
McResistance,
its allied media, and its allied intelligence and national security
agencies
and officials. Whatever one wants to say about any other aspect of this
investigation—campaign finance violations, obstruction of justice,
etc.—they
were not the main saga for the past two+ years as spun by the
Russiagaters. The
core narrative was that Donald Trump was some kind of Russian agent or
asset, arguably
guilty of treason and taking orders from his handler/blackmailer
Vladimir Putin,
who conspired with him to steal the 2016 election, and, furthermore,
that Saint
Mueller and his investigation team of patriotic FBI/CIA agents were
going to find
the goods that would have the Donald taken out of the White House in
handcuffs for
that.
Keith
Olbermann’s spectacular rant in
January 2017 defined the core narrative and exemplified the Trump
Derangement
Syndrome that powered it: an emotional, visceral hatred of Donald Trump
wrapped
in the fantasy—insisted upon as “elemental, existential fact”—that he
was “put
in power by Vladimir Putin.” A projection and deflection, I would say,
of
liberals’ self-hatred for creating the conditions—eight years of war
and wealth
transfer capped off by a despised and entitled candidate—that allowed a
vapid clown
like Trump to be elected. It couldn’t be our
fault! It must have been Putin who arranged it!
Here’s a highlight of Keith’s delusional discourse. But, please watch the whole six-minute video below. They may have been a bit calmer, but this is the fundamental lunacy that was exuding from the rhetorical pores of Rachel, Chris, and Co. day after day for two+ years:
Here’s a highlight of Keith’s delusional discourse. But, please watch the whole six-minute video below. They may have been a bit calmer, but this is the fundamental lunacy that was exuding from the rhetorical pores of Rachel, Chris, and Co. day after day for two+ years:
The military apparatus of this country is about to be handed over to scum, who are beholden to scum, Russian scum! As things are today January 20th will not be an inauguration but rather the end of the United States as an independent country. Donald John Trump...is not a president; he is a puppet, put in power by Vladimir Putin. Those who ignore these elemental, existential facts—Democrats or Republicans—are traitors to this country. [Emphases in original. Really, watch it.]
This—Trump’s
secret, treasonous collusion
with Putin, and not hush money or campaign finance violations or
“obstruction
of justice” or his obvious overall sleaziness—was Russiagate.
Russiagate
is Dead! Long Live Russiagate!
And
it still is. Here’s the demonstration in New York
last Thursday, convened by the MoveOn/Maddow #Resistance, singing from
“the
hymnal” about how Trump is a “Russian whore” who is “busy blowing
Vladimir”:
This is lunacy.
Here are
the three lines of excuse and
denial currently being fired off by diehard Russiagaters in their
fighting
retreat, and my responses to them.
1.
The Mueller Report is irrelevant, anyhow. ‘Cause either A) Per
Congressional
blowhard Adam Schiff: There already "is direct evidence" proving
Trump-Russia collusion, dating from before the
Mueller Investigation, so who cares what that doesn't find; or B) (My
personal favorite) Per former prosecutor and CNN legal expert
Renato Mariotti: Of course
there is no evidence of Trump-Russia collusion, and it's “your fault”
for letting Trump fool you into
thinking Mueller’s job was to find it. (The Mueller
“collusion”
investigation was a red herring orchestrated/promoted by Trump! I
cannot make
this up.)
Mueller's report will almost certainly disappoint you, and it's not his fault. It's your fault for buying into Trump's false narrative that it is Mueller's' job to prove "collusion," a nearly impossible bar for any prosecutor to clear.
My piece in @TIME: https://t.co/VQ2WhhC996
— Renato Mariotti (@renato_mariotti) March 1, 2019
This is,
of course, the weakest volley. It’s
absurd, patent bad faith, for Russiagaters to pretend that they knew,
thought,
or suggested the Mueller investigation was irrelevant. It is they who
have been
insisting that the integrity and super-sleuthiness of the “revered”
Robert
Mueller himself was the thing
that would nail Donald Trump for Russian
collusion. To now deny that any of that was important only
acknowledges how
thoroughly they have been fooling the American people and/or themselves
for two
years. Either Adam Schiff had the goods on Trump’s traitorous Russian
collusion
two years ago, in which case he’s got a lot of explaining to do about
why he’s
been stringing us along with Mueller, or Schiff is just bluffing. Place
your
bets.
Russiagaters in 2017: YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT MUELLER KNOWS— Caitlin Johnstone ⏳ (@caitoz) March 22, 2019
Russiagaters in 2018: YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT MUELLER KNOWS
Russiagaters in 2019: Shut up Mueller, what would you know.
2.
The Mueller Report didn’t exonerate Trump entirely. It was agnostic
about
whether Trump was guilty of “obstruction of justice,” and there are
probably
many nasty things in the report that may not be provably criminal, but
nonetheless demonstrate what a slimeball Trump is.
No,
Russiagaters will not get away with denying
that the core purpose of the Mueller investigation was to prove Trump’s
traitorous relation to Vladimir Putin and the Russian government, which
helped
him win the 2016 election. They will not get away with denying that, if
the
Mueller investigation failed to prove that, it failed in its main
purpose, as they constantly defined and reinforced
it, with table-pounding, hyperventilating, and—a few days ago!—disco-dancing
to “the hymnal.”
They will
not get away with trying to
appropriate, as if it were their
point all along, what the left critics
of Russiagate have been saying for two+ years—that Donald Trump is a
slimeball grifter
whose culpability for politically substantive and probably legally
actionable
crimes and misdemeanors should not be hard to establish, without
reverting to
the absurd accusation that he’s a Russian agent.
These are
the left critics of Russiagate
and Trump, whom Russiagaters deliberately excluded from all their media
platforms, in order to make it seem that only right-wing
Trump supporters
could be skeptical of Russiagate—the left critics
Russiagaters then
excoriated as ”Trump enablers” and “Putin apologists” for speaking on
the only
media platforms that would host them.
Among them, Glenn Greenwald, Michael Tracey, and Aaron Maté (who just deservedly won the
I.F. Stone prize for his Russiagate coverage) were the most prominent,
but many
others, including me, made this point week after week (Brian Becker,
Dave
Lindorff, Dan Kovalik, Daniel Lazare, Ted Rall, to name a few). As I
put it in
an essay
last year: “There are a thousand reasons to criticize
Donald Trump…That Donald Trump is a Russian agent is not one of them.
There are
a number of very good justifications for seeking his impeachment…That
he is a
Kremlin agent is not one of them.”
So, it’s
a particularly slimy for Russiagaters
to slip into the position that we Russiagate skeptics have been
enunciating,
and they have been excluding, for two years, without acknowledging that
we were
right and they were wrong and accounting for their effort to edit us
out.
3.
But we haven’t seen the whole Mueller Report! Barr may be fooling us!
Mueller’s
own team says so! You are now doing what you accused us of doing for
two
years—abandoning proper skepticism about Republicans like Barr and even
Mueller
(Yup. He’s a suspicious
Republican now!), and assuming a final
result we have not yet seen.
This is
the one the Russiagaters like
the most. Gotcha with your own
logic!
Well,
let’s first of all thank those who
are saying this for, again, recognizing that we Russiagate critics had
the
right attitude toward such an investigation: cautious skepticism as
opposed to false
certainty. And let’s linger for a moment or more on how belated that
recognition is and what its delay cost.
But let’s
also recognize that what’s
being expressed here is the last-minute hope on the
part of the
Russiagaters that the Mueller report actually does contain dispositive
evidence of Trump’s treasonous Russian collusion. Because,
again, that is
the core accusation that hopeful Russiagaters are still singing about,
and
nobody ever argued that evidence of other hijinks was unlikely.
Well,
that hope can only be realized if
one or both of the following are true: 1) Barr’s quotes from the report
exonerating
Trump of collusion are complete fabrications, or 2) Mueller both wrote
those
words even though they contradict the substance of his own report and
declined
to indict a single U.S. person for such “collusion” even though he
could have.
Sure, in
the abstract, one or both of
those conditions could be true. But there is no
evidence, none, that
either is. The New York Times (NYT) report that set
everyone aflutter
about the “concern” from “some members of Mr. Mueller’s team” is
anonymous,
unspecified, and second-hand. Read it carefully:
The NYT did not
report what any member of Mueller’s team said, but what “government
officials
and others familiar with their simmering frustrations” said. Those “officials
and others interviewed [not members of the Mueller team
itself] declined to
flesh out” to the NYT what “some of the special
counsel’s investigators”
were unhappy about. To that empty hearsay, the NYT
appends the phrase
“although the report is believed to examine Mr. Trump’s efforts to
thwart the
investigation”—suggesting, but not stating, that obstruction of justice
issues
are the reasons for the investigators’ “vexation.” The NYT
cannot state,
because it does not know, anything. It is reporting
empty hearsay that
is evidence of nothing, but is meant to keep hope alive.
“[T]he
report
is believed to examine” is a particularly
strange locution. Is the NYT suggesting that the Mueller report might not
have examined obstruction of justice
possibilities? Or is it just getting tangled up in its attempt to
suggest this
or that? Hey, it could just as well be true that
Barr’s
characterization of what the Mueller Report says about “obstruction of
justice”
is a misleading fabrication. Maybe Mueller actually exonerated Trump of
that.
If you mistrust Barr’s version of what the Mueller Report says about
collusion,
why not equally mistrust what it says about obstruction of justice?
There is no
evidence that Barr’s summary is radically misleading about
the core collusion conclusion of
the Mueller Report. The walls are
closing in, alright, on that story. The I’m
just being as cautious now as you were
before! line is the opposite of the reasonable skepticism is
claims to be;
it’s Russiagaters clinging to a wish and a belief that something they
want to
be true is, despite the determinate lack
of any evidence.
It’s not
just the words; it’s the melody,
and the desperation in the voices. The core Trump-blowing-Vladimir
collusion song
that #Resisters are still singing is a fantastical fiction and the
people still
singing it are the pathetic choir on the Russiagate Titanic. And while
they’re
singing as they sink, Trump is escaping in the lifeboat they have
provided him.
The single most definite and undeniable effect of the Mueller
investigation on
American politics has been to hand Donald Trump a potent political
weapon for
his 2020 re-election campaign. A real bombshell.
It would
be funny, if it weren’t so
funny:
But it’s worse
than that. The falsity of
the Trump-as-a-Russian-agent narrative does not depend on any
confidence in
Mueller and his report or Barr and his summary. The truth is there
was no Russiagate investigation,
in the sense of a serious attempt to find out whether Donald Trump was
taking
orders from, or “coordinating” with, Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin.
No person
in their right mind could
believe that. Robert Mueller doesn’t believe it. Nancy Pelosi doesn’t
believe
it. Adam Schiff doesn’t believe it. John
Brennan, James Clapper, and the heads of intelligence agencies do not
believe
it. Not for a second. No knowledgeable international affairs journalist
or
academic who thinks about it for two minutes believes it. Sure, some
politicians and media pundits did work themselves up into a state where
they
internalized and projected a belief in the narrative, but few of them
really
believed it. They were serving the Kool-Aid. Only the most gullible
sectors of
their target audience drank it.
With some
exceptions, to be sure (Donald
Trump among them), the people in the highest echelons of the
state-media-academic
apparatus are just not that stupid. And, most obvious and important,
Vladimir
Putin is not that stupid, and they know he is not. Vladimir Putin would
never
rely on Donald Trump to be his operative in a complex operation that
required shrewdly
playing and evading the US intelligence and media apparatuses. Nobody
is that
stupid. Thinking about it that way for a second dissipates the entire
ridiculous idea. (Not to mention that Trump ended up enacting a number of policies—many
more
than Obama!—contrary to Russian interests.)
The
obvious, which many people in the
independent media and none in the mainstream media (because it is so
obvious,
and would have blown their game) have pointed out, is that any real
investigation of Russiagate would have sought to talk with the
principals who
had direct knowledge of who is responsible for leaking the infamous DNC
documents:
Julian Assange and former British ambassador Craig Murray
(“I know who leaked them. I’ve met the person who leaked them.”). They
were essentially two undisputed eyewitnesses to the crime Mueller was
supposed
to be investigating, and he made no effort to talk
to either of them. Ipso
facto, it was not really an investigation, not a project
whose purpose was
to find the truth about whatever the thing called “Russiagate” is
supposed to
be.
The
Eternal Witch-hunt
It was a
theater of discipline. Its purpose, which it achieved, was to
discipline Trump, the Democratic
electorate, and the media. Its method was fishing around in the muck of
Washington consultants, lobbyists, and influence peddlers to generate
indictments and plea bargains for crimes irrelevant to the core
mandate. Not
hard, in a carceral state where prosecutors
can pin three felonies a day
on anyone.
The US
establishment, especially its
national security arm, was genuinely shocked that their anointed
candidate,
Hillary, who was, as Glen Ford puts it
“’all in’ with the global military
offensive” that Obama had run through Libya, Syria, and the coup in
Ukraine,
was defeated by a nitwit candidate who was making impermissibly
non-aggressive
noises about things like Russia and NATO, and who actually wanted to lose. For their part,
the Democrats were
horrified, and did not want to face the necessary reckoning about the
complete
failure of their
candidate, and the best-of-all-possible-liberaloid-worlds strategy she
personified.
So,
“within 24 hours of her concession
speech” Hillary’s campaign team (Robby Mook and John Podesta) created
a “script they would pitch to the press
and the public” to explain why she lost. “Russian hacking was the
centerpiece
of the argument.” A few months later, a coalition of congressional
Democrats,,
establishment Republicans, and intelligence/natsec professionals
pressured
Trump (who, we can now see clearly, is putty in the hands of the
latter) to
initiate a Special Counsel investigation. Its ostensible goal was to
investigate Russian collusion, but its real goals were:
1) To
discipline Trump, preventing any
backpedaling on NATO/imperialist war-mongering against Russia or any
other
target. Frankly, I think this was unnecessary. Trump never had any
depth of
principle in his remarks about de-escalating with Russia and Syria. He
was
always a staunch American exceptionalist and Zionist. Nobody has forced
him (that’s
a right-wing fantasy) to attack Syria, appoint John Bolton, recognize
Israeli
authority over Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, or threaten Iran and
Venezuela.
But the natsec deep state actors did (and do) not trust Trump’s
impulsiveness. They
probably also thought it would be useful to “send a message” to Russia,
which, in
their arrogance, they think they can, but they cannot, “discipline,” as
I’ve
discussed in a previous essay.
2) To
discipline the media, making
“Russian collusion,” as Off-Guardian
journalist Kit Knightly says,
“a concept that keeps everyone in check.” Thus, a Russophobia-related
McCarthyite hysteria was engendered that defined any strong
anti-interventionist
or anti-establishment sentiment as Russian-sown “divisiveness” and
“Putin
apologetics.” This discipline was eagerly accepted by the mainstream
media,
which joined in the related drive to demand new forms of censorship for
independent
and internet media. The epitome of this is the mainstream media’s
execrable, tacit
and sometimes explicit acceptance of the US government’s campaign to
prosecute
Julian Assange.
3) To
discipline and corral the Democratic
constituency. Establishment Dems riled up outraged progressives with deceptive
implied promises to take Trump
down based on the collusion fiction, which excused Hillary and diverted
their attention
from the real egregious failures and crimes that led their party to political ruin,
and culminated in the election of
Trump in the first place. This discipline also instituted a #Resistance
to
Trump that involved the party doing nothing substantively progressive
in
policy—indeed, it allowed embracing Trump’s most egregious militarism
and promoting
an alliance with, a positive reverence for, the most deceptive and
reactionary
institutions of the state.
Finally,
incorporating point 2, perhaps
the main point of this discipline—indeed of the whole Mueller
enterprise—was to
stigmatize the leftists and socialists in and around the party, who were
questioning the collusion fiction and calling critical attention to the
party’s
failures, as crypto-fascist “Trump enablers” or “Putin’s useful
idiots.” It’s
all about fencing out the left and corralling the base.
Note the
point regarding the deceptive
implications about taking down Trump. Though they gave the opposite
impression
to rile up their constituents, Democratic Congressional leaders, for
the
reasons given above and others I laid out in a previous essay,
did not think for a second they were going
to impeach Trump. They were never really after impeaching Trump; they
were and
are after stringing along their dissatisfied progressive-minded voters.
They,
not Trump, were and are the target of the foolery.
We should
recognize that Russiagate/The
Mueller Investigation achieved all of these goals, and was therefore a
great
success. That’s the case whatever part of the Mueller Report is
summarized and
released, and whoever interprets it. The whole report with all of the
underlying evidence cannot legally be released to the public, and the
Democrats
know that. So, even if the House gets it, the public will only ever see
portions doled out by various interested parties.
Thus, it
will continue to be a great
success. There will be endless leaks, and interpretations of leaks, and
arguments about the interpretations of leaks based on speculation about
what’s
still hidden. The Mueller Investigation has morphed into the Mueller
Report, a
hermeneutical exercise that will go on forever.
The
Mueller Investigation never happened
and will never end.
It wasn’t
an investigation. It was/is an
act of political theater, staged in an ongoing dramatic festival where,
increasingly, litigation substitutes for politics. Neither party has
anything
of real, lasting, positive political substance to offer, and each finds
itself
in power only because it conned the electorate into thinking it offered
something new. That results in every politician being vulnerable, but
to a
politically vacuous opposition that can only mount its attacks on
largely
politically irrelevant, often impossible to adjudicate, legalistic or
moralistic
grounds. Prosecutorial inquiry becomes a substitute for substantive
political
challenge.
It’s the
template that was established
by the Republicans against Bill Clinton, has been adapted by the
Democrats for
Trump and Russiagate, and will be ceaselessly repeated. What’s coming
next, already
hinted at in William Barr’s congressional testimony,
will be an investigation of FISAGate—an
inquiry into whether the FISA warrants for spying on the Trump campaign
and
administration were obtained legally (“adequately predicated”). And/or
UkraineGate, about
the evidence “Ukrainian law enforcement officials believe
they have…of wrongdoing by American Democrats and their allies in Kiev,
ranging
from 2016 election interference to obstructing criminal probes,”
involving Tony
Podesta (who worked right alongside Paul Manafort in Ukraine), Hillary
Clinton’s
campaign,
Joe Biden and his son, et. al. And/or CampaignGate,
the lawsuit claiming
that Hillary’s national campaign illegally
took $84 million of “straw man” contributions made to state Democratic
campaigns.
And/or CraigGate, involving powerful Democratic fixer
and Obama White House Counsel, Gregory Craig, who has
already been referred
to federal prosecutors by Mueller, and
whose law firm has already paid
a $4.6 million-dollar fine for making false statement and
failing to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act—for work
he did
in Ukraine with—who else?—Paul Manafort.
There are
-Gates galore. If you haven’t
heard about any of these simmering scandals in the way you’ve heard
incessantly
about, you know, Paul Manafort, perhaps
that’s because they didn’t fit into the “get Trump” theme of the
Mueller Investigation/Russiagate
political theater. Rest assured the
Republicans have, and will likely make sure that you do. If you think
the
Republicans do not have at least as much
of a chance to make a serious case with some of these as Mueller did
with
Trump, you are wrong. If you think the
Republicans will pursue any of these investigations because they have
the same
principled concern as the Democrats about foreign collusion in US
elections, or
the legality of campaign contributions or surveillance warrants, you
are right.
They have none. Like the Democrats, they have zero concern for the
ostensible
issues of principle, and infinite enthusiasm for mounting “gotcha” political
theater.
Neither
party really wants, or knows
how, to engage in a sustained, principled debate on substantive
political
issues—things like universal-coverage, single-payer health insurance, a
job
guarantee, a radical reduction of the military budget, an end to
imperialist
intervention, increasing taxes on the wealthy and
lowering them for working people, a break from the “overwhelming”
and destructive influence of Zionism,
to name a few of the policies the Democratic congressional leadership
could
have insisted on “investigating” over the last two years..
Instead,
both parties’ political
campaigns rely on otherizing appeals based on superficial identity
politics (white-affirmative
on the one hand, POC-affirmative on the other) and, mainly, on bashing
the
other party for all the problems it ignored or exacerbated, and all the
terrible policies it enacted, when it was in power—and for the version
of
superficial, otherizing identity politics it supposedly based those
policies on
(the real determinants of class power remaining invisible). What both
parties
know how and will continue to do is mount hypocritical legalistic and
moralistic “investigations” of illegal campaign contributions, support
from
foreign governments, teenage make-out sessions, personal-space
violations, et.
al., that they are just “shocked, shocked” about.
It’s
Investigation Nation. Fake politics
in the simulacrum of a democratic polity. Indeed, someone, of some
political perspicuity,
might just notice, if only for a flash, that the people who do pretty
well
politically are often the ones who frankly don’t give a crap about all
that.
Maybe because they’re talking to people who don’t give a crap about all
that. But
we wouldn’t want to confuse ourselves thinking on that for too long.
Which
brings us to the last point about Russiagate/The
Mueller Investigation mentioned above. It may not (or may!) have been
an
intended goal, but it has been its most definite political effect: The
Mueller Investigation
has been a great political gift to Donald Trump. #Resisters and
Russiagaters
can wriggle around that all they want. They can insist that, once we
get the
whole Report, we’ll turn the corner, the bombshell will explode, the
walls will
close in—for real, this time. Sure.
But even
they can’t deny that’s the case
right now. Trump is saying the Mueller investigation was a political
counterattack against the result of the election, masquerading as a
disinterested judicial investigation; that it was based on a flimsy
fiction and
designed to dig around in every corner of his closets to find nasty and
incriminating things that were entirely irrelevant to the ostensible
mandate of
the investigation and to any substantive, upfront
political critique—a
“witchhunt,” a “fishing expedition.” And he is right. And too many
people in
the country know he’s right. At this point, even most Russiagaters
themselves
know it—though they don’t care, and will never admit it.
So now
Trump, who could have been attacked
for two years politically on substance for betraying most of the
promises that
got him elected—more aggressive war, more tax cuts for the wealthy,
threatening
Medicare and Social Security—has instead been handed, by the
Democrats, the strongest arrow he now has in his political
quiver. As Matt Taibbi says:
“Trump couldn’t have asked for a juicier campaign issue,
and an easier way to argue that ‘elites’ don’t respect the democratic
choices
of flyover voters. It’s hard to imagine what could look worse.”
You might
think the Democratic Party
would be horrified at this result, which one conservative analyst calls:
“one of the
greatest self-defeating acts in history.” You might
think Democrats
would now move quickly and decisively toward a strategy of offering a
substantive political alternative, and abandon this awful own-goal
Mueller/Russiagate
tack that has already helped Trump immensely (and which they are not
going to turn their way). That is
obviously what would happen if the Democrats’ main goal was to defeat
Trump.
But it isn’t.
As
discussed
above, the Democratic establishment’s’ main goal throughout this was
not to
“get” Trump, but to channel its own voters’ disgust with him into
support for
some halcyon, liberal, status quo ante-Trump, and away from left
demands for a
radical change to the social, economic, and political conditions that
produced
him and his clueless establishment opponent in 2016. The Democrats’
goal was,
and is, not to defeat Trump, but to stave off the left.
What they
are
doing with the Mueller Investigation/Russiagate is what they did in the
primaries in 2016: Then, they deliberately promoted
Trump as an
opponent, while working assiduously to cheat their own leftist
candidate; now,
they gin up a fictional spy story whose inevitable collapse helps
Trump, but on
which they will double down, in order to continue branding “divisive”
leftists who
challenge any return to their version of status-quo normalcy as the
Kremlin’s
“useful idiots.”
The
Democrats’
main goal in all this is not to impeach, or stop the re-election of,
Donald
Trump; it’s to prevent the nomination and election of Bernie Sanders,
or anyone
like him.
Russiagate
Forever
Here’s
Tim Ryan’s presidential campaign kickoff speech in Youngstown, Ohio, a
poster
city of late American capitalist deindustrialization, explaining to the
voters
what is causing the destruction of their lives and towns. After
complaining
that “We have politicians and leaders today that want to divide us.
They want
to put us in one box or the other. You know, you can't be for business and
for labor,” he elaborates:
Yup, it’s
those Russians, you see, sowing
division through certain “politicians and leaders,” who are preventing
us from
fixing our healthcare, education, economic and government systems.
This—doubling
down on Russiagate—is the centrist Democrats’ idea of a winning
political
appeal. I consider it utterly delusional.
I heard
last week from a friend in
Western Pennsylvania, not too far from Youngstown. She’s a good person
who is
trying to organize Democrats in the area to beat Trump in 2020, and,
pleading
for advice, she expressed her exasperation: “They’re leaving the
party!”
You mean
the five million people
who voted
for Obama in 2012, in the 90% of
counties that voted for Obama either in 2008 or 2012, but would not
vote for
Hillary in 2016, aren’t streaming back into—are indeed still streaming
out of—the
Democratic Party, despite all the Mueller investigation has done for
them?
Imagine that.
What has
Russiagate/The Mueller
Investigation wrought? It’s either a shrewd political gambit sure to
take down
Trump, or it’s ridiculous political theater leading Democrats, and the
country,
over another cliff. Double-down or leave that table?
Place
your bets.
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This essay was published on Counterpunch with a typo (entirely my fault) in the next to last full paragraph--"Hillary in 2019" which should, of course, be "Hillary in 2016." It also did not have the links contained herein
Update (4/18/2019): Added Michael Tracey's name to prominent Russiagate skeptics.
Update (4/11/2019 7:15PM): Link added to this video of Aaron Maté destroying windbag Adam Schiff's attempt to keep zombie Russiagate going:
______________________
Related articles: Be Careful What You Ask For: Wasting Time with Manafort, Cohen, and Russiagate, Ship of Fools: What Trump Teaches, Donald The Destroyer: Assessing The Trump-Effect
_____________________
This essay was published on Counterpunch with a typo (entirely my fault) in the next to last full paragraph--"Hillary in 2019" which should, of course, be "Hillary in 2016." It also did not have the links contained herein
Update (4/18/2019): Added Michael Tracey's name to prominent Russiagate skeptics.
Update (4/11/2019 7:15PM): Link added to this video of Aaron Maté destroying windbag Adam Schiff's attempt to keep zombie Russiagate going:
Related articles: Be Careful What You Ask For: Wasting Time with Manafort, Cohen, and Russiagate, Ship of Fools: What Trump Teaches, Donald The Destroyer: Assessing The Trump-Effect
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