Donald Trump caused a bit of a stir yesterday with a tweet directed at Attorney General Jeff Sessions, calling it “disgraceful” that Sessions isn’t going further “to investigate potentially massive FISA abuse.” In reality, those abuses don’t appear to exist, but there was an underlying truth that went largely overlooked.
The president, in this case, was targeting the FBI. Trump believes it was federal law enforcement that unfairly targeted his political operation, and it’s FBI officials whom Trump wants the Justice Department to target.
A day earlier, members of the House Republican leadership spoke with reporters and fielded a series of questions about gun violence. GOP leaders directed much of their criticism at law enforcement.
House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), for example, said of the Parkland shooting, “In this particular case, there were a lot of breakdowns, from the local law enforcement to the FBI getting tips that they didn’t follow up on.” House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) added, “I think what angered me the most is when I see breakdowns with law enforcement.”
A day earlier, much of the country heard about Trump boasting that he would’ve confronted the Parkland gunman with his bare hands, but did you happen to catch the comments that immediately preceded that claim?
“The way [local law enforcement] performed was, frankly, disgusting. They were listening to what was going on. The one in particular, he was then — he was early. And then you had three others that probably a similar deal a little bit later, but a similar kind of a thing.
“You know, I really believe — you don’t know until you test it — but I really believe I’d run in there, even if I didn’t had a weapon. And I think most of the people in this room would have done that, too, because I know most of you. But the way they performed was really a disgrace.”
In 2009, Barack Obama said a Boston-area police officer acted “stupidly” when he arrested Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. in his own home. It sparked months of outrage and years of conservative claims about the Democratic president being “hostile” toward the police. The incident served as a reminder of why law enforcement is so often aligned with Republican politics.
Nearly a decade later, however, the politics have changed. Suddenly, it’s Republican leaders who are blasting law enforcement in ways we’re not accustomed to.
For all his talk about “law and order,” Trump has spent much of his presidency targeting law enforcement in stunning ways, including firing U.S. attorneys under unusual circumstances, firing an acting U.S. Attorney General who dared to give the White House sound legal advice, and firing the director of the FBI in the hopes of derailing an ongoing investigation. It’s just part of an extended, months-long presidential campaign against federal law enforcement.
But he’s not alone. The NRA’s Wayne LaPierre targeted the FBI in his speech last week at the Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC), and plenty of other speakers at the same event did the same thing. NBC News reported the other day, “The Conservative Political Action Conference has an enemies list: the FBI, the Justice Department and special counsel Robert Mueller.”









