The Wall Street Journal asked Donald Trump yesterday whether he wants congressional Republicans to shut down investigations into the Russia scandal. The president said no, before insisting that Democrats colluded with Russians during the campaign, which Trump says with increasing frequency, despite the fact that the claim is plainly ridiculous.
But unprompted, he quickly transitioned to throwing around accusations of treason.
TRUMP: What went on with the FBI, where a man is tweeting to his lover that if she loses, we’ll essentially go back to the — we’ll go to the “insurance policy,” which is — if they lose, we’ll go to phase 2, and we’ll get this guy out of office. I mean, this is the FBI we’re talking about. I think that is — that is treason. See, that’s treason right there.
WSJ: Does any of that make you less…
TRUMP: By the way, that’s a treasonous act. What he tweeted to his lover is a treasonous act.
As a rule, sitting presidents should be cautious about casually throwing around accusations of treason, and in this case, Trump’s recklessness is especially tough to defend.









