There was an amazing moment on Capitol Hill yesterday afternoon, when Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) unveiled his party’s $1 trillion economic aid package. Asked why the bill, which McConnell’s office ostensibly helped write, includes $1.75 billion for the FBI’s headquarters, the Republican leader replied, “I’m not sure that it is” in the proposal.
When an aide reminded McConnell that the money is, in fact, included in the package, the GOP senator said it was Donald Trump’s White House that demanded the funding for the building. McConnell, apparently eager to pass the buck, added that it will be up to administration officials “to answer the question as to why they insisted on that.”
A Washington Post report added:
Under intense White House pressure, Senate Republicans agreed Monday to allocate $1.75 billion in their coronavirus relief bill toward the construction of a new D.C. headquarters for the FBI. But top Senate Republicans immediately began distancing themselves from the provision after it was made public, saying they weren’t sure why the White House repeatedly insisted on putting it in the bill.
Remember, at issue is an economic aid package written specifically to address the coronavirus pandemic and its effects. Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), part of the team that negotiated the Republican package, was asked yesterday what a new FBI building had to do with the public-health and economic crises.
The Alabama Republican paused before replying, “Good question.”
Not surprisingly, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) were not pleased, with the latter asking yesterday, “What the heck is going on?”
It was a rhetorical question, though I think the answer is tough to avoid.
For those just joining us, let’s revisit our earlier coverage of what I’ve long seen as one of the more under-appreciated scandals of the Trump presidency.
Trump’s keen interest in the FBI’s headquarters has been ongoing for quite a while. In fact, Axios reported exactly two years ago tomorrow on the president’s “obsession” with the question about whether to leave the FBI where it is or relocate the bureau’s headquarters to a nearby suburb.
The president made it clear he was “dead opposed to plans to move it out of D.C.,” Axios added at the time.
Asked for an explanation, then-White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters in October 2018, “The president wanted to save the government money,” which is why he directly intervened in the project. The Wall Street Journal reported soon after that Sanders’ argument was the opposite of the truth: the administration knew that keeping the FBI headquarters in downtown D.C. “would cost more than a competing proposal to relocate to the suburbs.”








