A couple of weeks ago, Donald Trump complained that the FBI should have contacted his campaign in 2016 to alert him to the “Russia problem.” What the president failed to mention is that the FBI did warn him during the campaign about possible foreign efforts to infiltrate his campaign.
What’s more, as NBC News reported, both major party presidential nominees “were urged to alert the FBI about any suspicious overtures to their campaigns.”
Of course, there’s a large roster of Russians connected to Putin’s government who were in contact with the Trump campaign or the Trump transition team before the president’s inauguration, but neither Trump nor anyone on his campaign thought to mention any of this to federal law enforcement, even after the FBI’s warning.
All of which sets the stage for an interesting new proposal from Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), a member of the House Intelligence Committee, who made a pitch in The Atlantic yesterday in support of the Duty to Report Act, which would “explicitly require candidates and campaigns to notify the FBI if anyone representing a foreign power offers dirt on that candidate’s opponents.”
[T]he legislation would make it a crime for candidates, their immediate family, or people involved with their campaign to fail to notify the FBI if any of them are told about, are offered, or receive in an unsolicited way nonpublic, materially significant information about another person running for the same office, when they know or recklessly disregard that the source is a foreign power or agent of a foreign power.









