Over the course of his presidency’s first year, Donald Trump came up with a conspiracy theory he seemed quite excited about. The Republican called it “Spygate.”
If you’re struggling to remember the details of the manufactured controversy, don’t feel too bad about it: Trump also had a hard time explaining exactly what he thought the story was all about. In 2017, for example, Trump invested a fair amount of energy pretending that Barack Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower. (There was no such wiretapping.) A year later, “Spygate” involved an imagined scheme in which the FBI put a spy in his 2016 political operation. (That didn’t happen, either.)
Even congressional Republicans distanced themselves from the absurdities, and eventually, the nonsense faded away — though Trump would nevertheless declare periodically that the Obama administration had spied on him. It wasn’t true. He didn’t care.
Four years later, the now-former president has apparently decided to tweak his conspiracy theory, swapping out one central detail for another. In the new iteration, Barack Obama didn’t spy on him, but Hillary Clinton did.
On Saturday, Trump issued a written statement claiming that John Durham has presented “indisputable evidence that my campaign and presidency were spied on by operatives paid by the Hillary Clinton Campaign.” The former president’s statement added that the controversy, such as it is, should be seen as “far greater” than Watergate, adding, “In a stronger period of time in our country, this crime would have been punishable by death.”
No, seriously, that’s what he put in writing.
A day later, Trump issued another statement, repeating the “spying” claim. Then he issued another statement. And then another. Eventually, the Republican started issuing statements complaining that journalists weren’t paying enough attention to his hysterical whining about Team Clinton getting caught “illegally spying into the Office of the President.”
As is often the case, the trouble is that Trump doesn’t understand the story that sparked his tantrum. The New York Times explained:
When John H. Durham, the Trump-era special counsel investigating the inquiry into Russia’s 2016 election interference, filed a pretrial motion on Friday night, he slipped in a few extra sentences that set off a furor among right-wing outlets about purported spying on former President Donald J. Trump. But the entire narrative appeared to be mostly wrong or old news — the latest example of the challenge created by a barrage of similar conspiracy theories from Mr. Trump and his allies.
It’s probably worth pausing to review how we arrived at this point.
As regular readers may recall, the investigations into Trump’s Russia scandal led to a series of striking findings: The former president’s political operation in 2016 sought, embraced, capitalized on, and lied about Russian assistance — and then took steps to obstruct the investigation into the foreign interference.
The Trump White House wasn’t pleased, and the Justice Department’s inspector general conducted a lengthy probe of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation. Not surprisingly, the IG’s office found nothing improper.
This, of course, only served to outrage Trump even more, so then-Attorney General Bill Barr tapped a federal prosecutor — U.S. Attorney John Durham — to conduct his own investigation into the investigation.
Trump has periodically blurted out the prosecutor’s name, hoping Durham would bolster the Republican’s conspiracy theories, but little has come of the probe.
That said, it would be an overstatement to say Durham hasn’t charged anyone. Last September, the prosecutor indicted cybersecurity attorney Michael Sussmann for allegedly having lied to the FBI. Soon thereafter, evidence emerged that Durham’s indictment was misleading, relying on selective quotes and omitting relevant details from their proper context. In December, Sussman’s lawyers disclosed evidence that raised additional doubts about the reliability of Durham’s charges.
Indeed, the whole case is terribly odd. Sussman met with the FBI nearly six years ago to discuss alleged connections between the Trump Organization’s computers and the Kremlin-linked Alfa Bank. According to Durham, he claimed he wasn’t acting on Clinton’s behalf when he secretly was. Sussman’s defense team has said he never claimed not to have clients, and it didn’t much matter who he worked for anyway.








