The headline on the New York Times piece yesterday had a vaguely sinister tone: “Schiff Got Early Account of Accusations as Whistle-Blower’s Concerns Grew.” Those who read the article, however, learned of a series of events featuring officials who went strictly by the book.
The intelligence community’s whistleblower, aware of Donald Trump’s alleged misconduct, approached the House Intelligence Committee seeking guidance. A committee aide encouraged the whistleblower to get legal counsel and share the concerns with the intelligence community’s inspector general. The congressional aide alerted House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calf.) to what transpired, but the congressman didn’t see the complaint or know the whistleblower’s identity.
In other words, Schiff’s aide directed the whistleblower to follow the law. The process moved forward the way it was supposed to.
And yet, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who appeared eager to promote the New York Times article without having read it, insisted yesterday that Schiff “just got caught orchestrating with the whistleblower.” That’s obviously not at all what happened, and it was curious to see the top House Republican screw this up so badly.
But it was Donald Trump who took this mistake to hysterical depths.









