House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) has reportedly packaged together some partisan talking points intended to provide Donald Trump cover in the Russia scandal. The idea, as we discussed earlier, is to shift attention away from the White House by pointing the finger at the Justice Department, the FBI, Fusion GPS, and intelligence professionals.
The Justice Department does not seem impressed, describing the release of a memo featuring classified information as “extraordinarily reckless.” Donald Trump and his team, however, are siding with the president’s GOP allies in Congress, not the Justice Department.
On CBS’s “Face the Nation” yesterday, Marc Short, the White House’s legislative affair director, characterized Team Trump’s position this way:
“Well, we haven’t, obviously, read the memo. It’s classified, so it’s hard for me to speculate what’s in the memo. I do think that we typically prefer transparency and so if there are concerns that I think would be helpful for Americans to know about it we would be open for that being released.”
At a press briefing last week, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders used similar phrasing when asked about Nunes’ document and its possible release. “We certainly support full transparency,” the president’s spokesperson argued, adding, “And as I said yesterday, and we’ve said many times before on a number of different issues, we certainly support that transparency…. [W]e support full transparency.”
First, it’s worth pausing to appreciate the irony of the circumstances. Donald Trump won’t release his tax returns. Trump’s White House won’t release its visitor logs. Trump’s inaugural committee won’t disclose its controversial finances. Trump’s Florida resort has gone to court to keep its customer list secret. Trump’s White House even tries to obscure his golfing habits.
For Trump World to suggest it “prefers transparency” is, if we’re being charitable, amusing.









