In early April, after Donald Trump fired the inspector general of the intelligence community for no reason, a bipartisan group of senators pushed back against the decision. Soon after, some Senate Republicans, each of whom are generally allied with the White House, wrote to the president, urging him “to work with IGs, not against them.”
Two weeks later, Politico reported that GOP lawmakers were determined to “convince the president that inspectors general aren’t his enemies.”
The appeals clearly failed, as Trump blew off the concerns from within his own party, firing his fourth IG in six weeks late Friday night. The fact that the decision to oust the State Department’s inspector general was held for a Friday night news dump suggests the president and his team know moves like these are wrong, but they keep taking the steps anyway, confident Trump and his aides can get away with it.
Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) sat down with CNN’s Jake Tapper yesterday and made clear that the president’s assumptions about firing independent watchdogs with impunity are almost certainly correct.
“I take a slightly different view in terms of what [inspectors general] should be independent from. They need to retain their independence within the agencies, so they can do inspections and investigations and provide that to their leadership, but primarily to the president. And so they serve at the president’s will.”
In other words, according to the powerful Republican committee chair, inspectors general are independent watchdogs, but they aren’t, and shouldn’t expect to be, independent of Trump. [Update: It appears the Wisconsinite used to have a different posture before the Trump era.]
As part of the same interview, Johnson said he knew why the president fired the State Department IG, but he wouldn’t share the reason. The senator added, “I’m not crying big crocodile tears over this termination.”
It’s worth noting for context that there was quite a bit of reporting over the weekend suggesting that State Department Inspector General Steve Linick had opened an investigation into Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The cabinet secretary then told Trump to fire the IG, and the president obliged.
Ron Johnson left little doubt yesterday that he doesn’t much care — despite the fact that the committee he leads has direct oversight responsibilities over alleged corruption like this.









