The White House’s campaign against former FBI Director James Comey has intensified of late, and yesterday, it reached a striking new level.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said on Tuesday that the Justice Department should “certainly look at” charging James B. Comey, the F.B.I. director whom President Trump fired, for what she described as leaks of classified information. […]
Asked whether Mr. Comey should be prosecuted, Ms. Sanders replied, “That’s not the president’s role.” She added, “That’s the job of the Department of Justice, and something they should certainly look at.”
The president’s spokesperson added that Comey’s actions “were improper and likely could have been illegal.”
Asked similar questions in Monday’s press briefing, Sanders emphasized that she’s “not an attorney,” but a day later, she nevertheless seemed comfortable reflecting on the former FBI director’s alleged misdeeds.
To the extent that reality matters, no one at the White House has pointed to any specific instances in which Comey committed alleged crimes, but that’s obviously not what this is about. Trump World recognizes the Russia scandal as an existential threat to Trump’s presidency, and given the apparent investigation into obstruction of justice, the president’s team believes it must tear down the former FBI director’s credibility.
Evidently, that includes accusing him of wrongdoing without credible evidence to back it up.
What often goes overlooked, however, is how common this line of attack is in Trump World: opponents aren’t just attacked; they’re almost instinctively labeled criminals.









