Seizing on the Mueller report they have not read, Republicans have come up with a long series of villains, whom they now feel justified launching aggressive campaigns against. At the top of the list, evidently, is House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.).
As Politico reported yesterday, the Democratic congressman is confronting “a withering Republican assault.”
Schiff was pummeled repeatedly on Fox News and other right-leaning media outlets during the past two days. Trump himself picked up on the anti-Schiff tirade, retweeting a “Fox and Friends” interview in which the California Democrat was excoriated.
[House Minority Leader Kevin] McCarthy called on Schiff to step down as Intelligence Committee chairman during an interview on Monday.
At the White House, Kellyanne Conway went so far as to call for Schiff’s immediate resignation from Congress.
So, what is it, exactly, that the House Intelligence Committee chairman did to deserve this furious public-relations offensive? As Republicans were quick to note, Schiff made a series of statements, claiming he’d seen evidence of cooperation between the Trump campaign and Russia.
This, in his attackers’ minds, has now been discredited, which means Schiff was wrong, which means he no longer has any credibility, which means he shouldn’t be the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, which means he may not even deserve to be in Congress at all.
There’s just one small problem with the first in this series of dominos.
This need not be complicated: Schiff’s claim about having seen evidence of cooperation between Team Trump and our Russian attackers might very well be true. I realize there have been some reports that Mueller found “no evidence” of coordination between the Republican campaign and Moscow, but that’s not what Attorney General Bill Barr said.









