Six years ago, Sen. Marco Rubio repeatedly warned Americans that Donald Trump was so “dangerous” that he couldn’t be trusted with highly sensitive national security secrets. As it turns out, the Florida Republican was right: Trump brought classified materials to his unsecure country club and refused to give them back, apparently putting our national security at risk.
In fact, if any Senate Republicans were willing to say and do the right thing in response to the Mar-a-Lago scandal, it should be Rubio. Not only was the Floridian right about Trump in 2016, but Rubio is also the vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee. He, as much as any GOP lawmaker, knows full well just how incredibly serious the former president’s alleged misconduct is.
And yet, even now, in the midst of his re-election campaign, Rubio can’t quite bring himself to put country over party. HuffPost highlighted the senator’s latest head-shaking rhetoric.
Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio characterized former President Donald Trump taking top-secret documents from the White House when he left office as nothing more than a “storage” issue.
In an interview that aired over the weekend, Rubio told the NBC affiliate in Miami, “This is, really, at its core, a storage argument that they’re making…. I don’t think a fight over storage of documents is worthy of what they’ve done, which is [a] full-scale raid and then these constant leaks.”
The senator added that officials are “arguing there are documents there” at Mar-a-Lago, but they “don’t deny that he should have access to those documents.”
It’s difficult to say what’s more amazing: the fact that Rubio said all of this out loud, or the fact that he expects the public to believe him.
First, downplaying the scandal as a “storage” issue is unintentionally funny, but it’s not credible. Trump stands accused of taking classified documents, refusing to return them, and possibly even obstructing the retrieval process. The vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee wants to pretend that this just isn’t that big a deal?
At a certain level, I suppose every theft is a “storage” issue. If robbers took your belongings, they might argue that they’ve simply decided to “store” your stuff somewhere new, but I have a hunch this wouldn’t prove persuasive in court.
Second, there was no “full-scale raid.” When Team Trump refused to cooperate, the FBI went to court, obtained a search warrant, and executed it in the least aggressive way possible: The bureau sent plain-clothed agents who coordinated in advance with the Secret Service.
Third, there haven’t been “constant leaks.” What we’ve actually seen is a series of court filings from the Justice Department made necessary by Team Trump’s highly dubious legal strategies.
Fourth, while Rubio argued that officials “don’t deny that he should have access to those documents,” the whole point of the scandal is that officials absolutely deny that Trump should have these sensitive secret materials at his country club.








