Nov. 25, 2019
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Administrative state bares its teeth and shows that it is the real threat to the Republic
What do you do when the federal employees hired to
implement the policies of the duly elected President of the United States not
only refuse to do so, but participate in a partisan witch hunt designed to
unseat him? Under current law, not much.
Former Ukraine Ambassador Marie Yovanovich is resting comfortably
somewhere in a State Department office.
Lt. Colonel Alexander Vindman is still prowling around the White House
complex taking selfies in front of what could be presumed to be his office
door, and George Kent is skulking around the bowels of the Foggy Bottom State
Department headquarters. How can this be, you ask? They are all civil servants,
and as a result the process for firing a civil servant is long, arduous and
frankly so time consuming as to make it barely worthwhile.
Video: The Constitution hangs by a thread after spygate, can Attorney General Barr save it in time?
It is up to Attorney General William Barr to put the
spygate genie back in the bottle, by prosecuting clear violations of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that was used to spy on the opposition
party in an election year—so that it never happens again.
John Bolton believes presidents can rescind treaties without the Senate, but objected to President Donald Trump pausing military aid to Ukraine
Former National Security Advisor John Bolton has a
long history of encouraging presidents to terminate treaties without going to
the Senate for approval under the President’s inherent powers to conduct
foreign affairs under Article II of the Constitution, vesting of executive
power solely in the President. But he took issue with President Donald Trump
briefly pausing and reviewing military and other foreign assistance to Ukraine
on the grounds the President lacked legal authority. The funding included $250
million in military assistance and another $141 million in other foreign aid via
the State Department to Ukraine. According to a Nov. 9 report from
Bloomberg.com: “shortly before Sept. 9, Bolton had relayed a message to the
State Department that the funding could go ahead. It’s not clear whether
Bolton, who resigned from the job a week later, did so with Trump’s approval.
Bolton’s handling of the funding struck officials in the White House as
violating protocol and caught Mulvaney by surprise, according to another person
familiar with the matter.” Did the President approve the transfer? When it
comes to the execution of foreign affairs powers, employees of the executive
branch must act in accordance with the President’s policies, or else it is
they, and not the President, who are the ones acting above the supreme law of
the land, the Constitution’s Article II vesting of executive power in the
President.
Sen. Johnson letter proves no quid pro on military aid, exonerates President Trump
Americans for Limited Government President Rick
Manning: “According to Senate Homeland Security Chairman Ron Johnson, he
directly asked President Trump on Aug. 31 if there was a quid pro quo for
Ukrainian military assistance to be released. The President told Johnson, 'No
way. I would never do that. Who told you that?' This was the day before Vice President
Pence met with Ukrainian President Zelensky, after which out-of-the-loop U.S.
Ambassador Sondland 'presumed' and suggested a quid pro quo to a Ukrainian
presidential aide that became ground zero for the whole quid pro quo confusion.
The simple fact that President Trump told Chairman Johnson on Aug. 31 long
before the so-called whistleblower complaint was ever made public that there
was no quid pro quo and alluded to the probable release of the aid, stating
'We're reviewing it now, and you'll probably like my final decision,'
indicating he would support it, which he did on Sept. 11, effectively ends
every conspiracy theory laden timeline that Adam Schiff has concocted. Every
person who testified to Schiff's committee was asked about a quid pro quo, and
every witness who thought there was one, and Senator Johnson too received their
second-hand information from Sondland, who was demonstrably wrong.”
Washington Examiner: Mueller lawyer with anti-Trump bias is ex-FBI official facing FISA criminal investigation
“The FBI lawyer who is under criminal investigation
for allegedly falsifying a document related to the surveillance of a Trump
campaign adviser expressed negative opinions of President Trump in messages to
colleagues. Kevin Clinesmith, who once was part of special counsel Robert
Mueller's team, has been identified as the attorney who faces a potential
criminal charge as part of U.S. Attorney John Durham's expansive criminal
investigation into the origins of the Russia inquiry, according to the New York
Times. As part of the Justice Department watchdog's now-completed investigation
into alleged surveillance abuses, Clinesmith was found to have altered an email
that was used by officials as they prepared an application renewal to present
before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to obtain a warrant to
electronically surveil Carter Page, a onetime foreign policy adviser for the
Trump campaign.”
Administrative state bares its teeth and shows that it is the real threat to the Republic
By Rick Manning
What do you do when the federal employees hired to implement the policies of the duly elected President of the United States not only refuse to do so, but participate in a partisan witch hunt designed to unseat him?
Under current law, not much. Former Ukraine Ambassador Marie Yovanovich is resting comfortably somewhere in a State Department office. Lt. Colonel Alexander Vindman is still prowling around the White House complex taking selfies in front of what could be presumed to be his office door, and George Kent is skulking around the bowels of the Foggy Bottom State Department headquarters.
How can this be, you ask?
They are all civil servants, and as a result the process for firing a civil servant is long, arduous and frankly so time consuming as to make it barely worthwhile.
In 2017, Americans for Limited Government began calling for the MERIT Act which allows for an expedited process to fire recalcitrant, incompetent or lazy federal employees. Unfortunately, it has not yet passed, but after the public display of arrogance and outright contempt for the policies of the elected President of the United States, the passage of the bill has never been more important and the funding bill that is under consideration provides the perfect vehicle for enacting it.
The MERIT Act language mirrors the Veteran’s Administration reform bill passed by Congress and signed by President Trump in 2017. As readers will likely remember, the VA was literally leaving veterans to die waiting in line to see a doctor, and the national outrage forced the Democrats to allow passage of a reform that allowed rapid personnel changes. And the VA has seen some real change. In 2017 alone, the firing of VA employees jumped by 27 percent, and overall, the VA has relieved 8,000 people of their duties.
It is time to apply the VA expedited personnel firing law to the rest of the federal government, and the best way to get it done is to add the language to the federal government appropriations bill which is under on-going discussion.
The greatest threat to our Republic is not a foreign invader, but instead is an out of control administrative state which believes that their thoughts supersede those of the elected officials. Given that it is extraordinarily difficult to fire this permanent governing class, they have the ability to delay and out weight Cabinet Secretary’s and even Presidents.
Over the past six years, we have witnessed the permanent FBI sub-leadership engage in illegal activity designed to take down President Trump. We have seen Lois Lerner and others within the IRS run a political targeting operation against those perceived to be opponents of President Obama. And in the Ukraine-inspired impeachment sham, we have heard first-hand the voices of contempt for the vote of the people.
It is time to rebalance the system by allowing these recalcitrant, incompetent or lazy employees to be fired in a timely manner if, and only if, there is cause. Perhaps this impeachment fail will lead to some good, and the MERIT Act, S1898, sponsored by Senator David Perdue of Georgia, will gain steam, as legislative anger swells over the administrative state attempted coup which America has witnessed.
While the MERIT Act is not the full answer to the challenges posed by an administrative state which demands fealty by those who are elected to govern, the simple truth is that you cannot drain the swamp unless you can fire the swamp.
Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.
Video: The Constitution hangs by a thread after spygate, can Attorney General Barr save it in time?
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4B8ECni0ASU
John Bolton believes presidents can rescind treaties without the Senate, but objected to President Donald Trump pausing military aid to Ukraine, a non-treaty partner
By Robert Romano
Former National Security Advisor John Bolton has a long history of encouraging presidents to terminate treaties without going to the Senate for approval under the President’s inherent powers to conduct foreign affairs under Article II of the Constitution vesting of executive power solely in the President. But he sided with State Department officials who took issue with President Donald Trump briefly pausing and reviewing military and other foreign assistance to Ukraine on the grounds the President lacked legal authority.
The funding included $250 million in military assistance to Ukraine via the Department of Defense and another $141 million in other foreign aid to Ukraine via the Department of State.
According to a Nov. 9 report from Bloomberg.com: “shortly before Sept. 9, Bolton had relayed a message to the State Department that the funding could go ahead. It’s not clear whether Bolton, who resigned from the job a week later, did so with Trump’s approval. Bolton’s handling of the funding struck officials in the White House as violating protocol and caught Mulvaney by surprise, according to another person familiar with the matter.” An Office of Management and Budget (OMB) spokesperson at the time denied that Bolton had done any such thing.
The report continued, noting that the State Department had already concluded it could release the monies without OMB’s approval, “The State Department decision, which hasn’t been reported previously, stemmed from a legal finding made earlier in the year, and conveyed in a classified memorandum to Secretary of State Michael Pompeo. State Department lawyers found the White House Office of Management and Budget, and thus the president, had no legal standing to block spending of the Ukraine aid.”
Former U.S. acting ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor told the House Intelligence Committee on Oct. 22 that both the State and Defense Departments on July 18 had determined they would not follow any directives from the White House on Ukrainian assistance, saying, “the State Department and maybe the Defense Department decided they were going to move forward with this assistance anyway, OMB notwithstanding. This was a big decision that [legal] had come to over there, over some debate as to whether or not they could without OMB’s clearance, send a [Congressional notification] to the Hill without OMB’s clearance, and they decided to do that. I don’t know if they’ve ever done that before. This was a big decision for them.”
Read that again. It was unprecedented. The ambassador stated, “I don’t know if they’ve ever done that before.”
So, there clearly was a dispute between the State Department and the White House over freezing the monies, and the Department had even produced a self-serving legal opinion that it could spend the monies without OMB — a dubious statement since all monies and regulations flow through OMB — challenging the President’s legal authority, that Bolton reportedly sided with right before he lost his job.
The funds were initially frozen in July by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the agencies authority under 31 U.S.C. 1512 to conduct apportionments while the President considered whether or not to request a rescission of the funding under the Impoundment Control Act.
The Office of Management and Budget says it did nothing wrong, with OMB communications director Rachel Semmel issuing a statement saying, “As has been well documented, we fully complied with the law and decades of precedent with respect to these funds. Congress is notified if the administration intends to rescind, defer, reprogram or transfer funding, but in this case none of those things occurred and the funding was obligated as planned.”
Under 2 U.S.C. Section 684 or 2 U.S.C. Section 683, the Impoundment Control Act, the President has the power to propose deferring funds on a temporary basis or rescinding them altogether, subject to Congressional approval.
The hold on Ukrainian aid came amid a wider freeze and review of overall State Department and USAID foreign aid spending in August.
In a conversation with President Trump and Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) on Aug. 31, Johnson detailed in a Nov. 18 letter from Johnson to House Republicans, Trump reportedly told Johnson his rationale for the freeze on Aug. 31: “The President was not prepared to lift the hold, and he was consistent in the reasons he cited. He reminded me how thoroughly corrupt Ukraine was and again conveyed his frustration that Europe doesn’t do its fair share of providing military aid.” But Trump hinted that the aid would be coming, saying to Johnson, “We’re reviewing it now, and you’ll probably like my final decision.”
Note, this conversation was before the anonymous CIA so-called whistleblower complaint had been made public, and has the President on the record as supporting a hold as well as potentially considering a rescission of the funds on the grounds that Ukraine is corrupt and might not be a reliable foreign partner.
Ultimately, the military assistance was released on Sept. 11, the same day he was fired, days after Bolton reportedly ordered the State Department aid released. Was that he reason he was let go? That is certainly the implication of the Bloomberg report.
In the meantime, Bolton had long fashioned his career in government around proposals for presidents to terminate treaties with foreign governments under the President’s inherent Article II executive powers, ironically under the same legal doctrine that presidential impoundment of monies is found. The first presidential impoundment occurred in 1800 by then President Thomas Jefferson, and had remained available to subsequent presidents until the Impoundment Control Act was adopted in 1974.
In his book, during the administration of President George W. Bush, Bolton was a supporter of the President unilaterally withdrawing from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with Russia, which Bush completed in 2002. Bolton wrote in his memoirs, “it was absolutely critical to get out of the ABM Treaty unambiguously. Then, whether we succeeded or failed in broader negotiations with Russia, we would be free to pursue a missile defense system to protect Americans from current threats,” calling it mockingly a “sacred scroll” to arms control advocates.
The decision was legally justified with a Nov. 2001 Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel opinion from then-Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Yoo and Robert Delahunty, who argued that the President could unilaterally withdraw from treaties without any Congressional action, including from the Senate, citing the 1793 Proclamation of Neutrality by George Washington, suspending a mutual defense treaty with France when it went to war with Great Britain, FDR’s decision to rescind a treaty with Japan in 1939 and Jimmy Carter’s withdrawal from a mutual defense treaty with Taiwan in 1979 as ample precedents.
Yoo and Delahunty wrote, “The President’s power to terminate treaties must reside in the President as a necessary corollary to the exercise of the President’s other plenary foreign affairs powers. As noted before, the President is the sole organ of the nation in regard to foreign nations. A President, therefore, may need to terminate a treaty in order to implement his decision to recognize a foreign government. Or, for example, the President may wish to terminate a treaty in order to reflect the fact that the treaty has become obsolete, to sanction a treaty partner for violations, to protect the United States from commitments that would threaten its national security, to condemn human rights violations, or to negotiate a better agreement.”
In 1793, Alexander Hamilton wrote of the President’s treaty withdrawal power in defense of the Proclamation of Neutrality: “though treaties can only be made by the President and Senate, their activity may be continued or suspended by the President alone.”
Bolton would later pen an oped with Yoo in the Wall Street Journal in 2014 arguing for unilateral presidential withdrawal from the 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia, which President Trump would complete in August.
Treaties require a Senate supermajority in order to ratify under Article II, but in this understanding of constitutional law, because of the President’s plenary powers over foreign affairs, he alone can terminate their execution.
So what of foreign aid? Or the powers to keep the United States out of a war? Or to end a war?
These actually untested areas of constitutional jurisprudence. Even the cases of treaty termination have had limited adjudication in courts. Jimmy Carter prevailed at the Supreme Court level in 1979, with instructions for the lower court to dismiss the case, but only on the grounds of non-justiciability, thus never proceeding to the merits. And yet, presidents have terminated or suspended treaties numerous times now.
Foreign military assistance surely treads onto the area of the President’s discretion in foreign policy, as it does the receiving country, requiring at least an executive agreement to receive the assistance, or an agreement of a faction within a country, if the U.S. was supporting one side in a civil war, as the U.S. has done in Ukraine since 2014, and then again in 2017 by sending military assistance.
But the U.S. and Ukraine do not have a mutual defense treaty. The 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances was an executive agreement, that upon Ukraine’s entrance into the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, the U.S., Russia and the United Kingdom would guarantee Ukraine’s territorial integrity. In 2014, when the U.S. supported the overthrow of the Viktor Yanukovych administration, Russia annexed Crimea but the Obama administration opted not to send military assistance — with all sides appearing to violate the agreement. Thus, the security assurances were abdicated, unilaterally, by President Barack Obama and by Russia. It was President Trump who signed the military assistance into law, but he must retain the power to oversee the execution of that law, consistent with international law, which the President alone interprets.
The agreement bars weapons being used “against” Ukraine, stating, “none of their weapons will ever be used against Ukraine except in self-defense or otherwise in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.” Given Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the military assistance would appear to be consistent with this provision, hanging on UN prohibitions on countries invading another country and other forms of aggression.
The security assurances also have provision for neither the U.S. nor Russia using economic coercion in Ukraine to advance their own national interests, reaffirming commitments “to refrain from economic coercion designed to subordinate to their own interest the exercise by Ukraine of the rights inherent in its sovereignty and thus to secure advantages of any kind.”
But that did not stop Congress from attaching terms and conditions to the assistance. In fact, Congress explicitly tied military assistance to Ukraine to Defense Department certifications that Ukraine is showing “improvement in transparency, accountability… for purposes of decreasing corruption…” Therefore, even if President Trump had tied military assistance to action by Ukraine on corruption, and wanted to prior certifications made ended, it would have been more than consistent with the law for him to direct to Secretary of Defense to be rolled back, if not consistent with the security assurances we gave Ukraine.
There also appear other means of limiting the use of the monies, for example, in Section 1001 of the National Defense Authorization Act, where the military assistance for Ukraine was appropriated and the President had limited transfer authority, and could have simply directed the Secretary of Defense to transfer the monies to another account: “Upon determination that such action is necessary in the national interest, the Secretary may transfer amounts of authorization made available to the Department of Defense in this division… between any such authorizations for that fiscal year (or any subdivisions thereof). Amounts of authorizations so transferred shall be merged with and be available for the same purposes to which transferred,” provided the total amounts transferred did not exceed $4.5 billion and that the monies were used for something else of “higher priority”.
22 U.S.C. Section 2360 authorizes the President similar limited transfer authority for the entire foreign aid budget every year, including Consolidated Appropriations Act, where the $141million of foreign Ukrainian aid was appropriated: “Whenever the President determines it to be necessary for the purposes of this chapter, not to exceed 10 per centum of the funds made available for any provision of this chapter (except funds made available pursuant to subpart IV of part II of subchapter I of this chapter or for section 2763 of this title) may be transferred to, and consolidated with, the funds made available for any provision of this chapter (except funds made available under part II of subchapter II of this chapter), and may be used for any of the purposes for which such funds may be used, except that the total in the provision for the benefit of which the transfer is made shall not be increased by more than 20 per centum of the amount of funds made available for such provision.”
So, if the President had wanted to, he had a menu of options for directing departments and agencies in freezing, rescinding or transferring the funds in question, all authorized by Congress. Here, Congress and members of those departments and agencies are faulting the President for even considering doing so, even though he is the President and can do so if he wishes.
What occurred here was a power grab, by the State Department and Defense Departments, if Taylor’s testimony that they planned to dispense with foreign aid whether the President liked it or not, and perhaps even the National Security Advisor at the time, Bolton, if Bloomberg’s reporting that he may have unilaterally released the State Department aid to Ukraine are true.
If treaties can be terminated by presidents alone, then concluding military commitments including via foreign assistance by the U.S. must rest with the President as well. In the past, there have been presidential determinations when hostilities have been concluded, for example with a ceasefire or armistice, or when U.S. assistance in commencing hostilities are concluded, or else Congress could keep the U.S. in a permanent state of war or seek to compel a President who was suing for peace or a ceasefire whether by proclamation, executive agreement or treaty, to continue a conflict he was seeking to conclude — an absurd Congressional commandeering of the Commander-in-Chief and foreign affairs powers of Article II.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1919 that “a technical state of war [is] terminable only with the ratification of a treaty of peace or a proclamation of peace,” appearing to overturn prior Supreme Court rulings that had stated a foreign war could only end via treaty. In this case, World War I had ended, the Senate had not ratified the Treaty of Versailles technically ending it legally, and thus the U.S. was still at a state of war. Enforcement of certain wartime provisions of law was at question. Woodrow Wilson at the time had refused to issue a proclamation of peace, and so war-time laws were still in effect. But what the court appeared to be saying was that in this event, where a peace treaty could not be ratified, to end the state of war, the President could alternatively do so via a proclamation.
Eventually, the U.S. had a formal treaty of peace with Germany on Nov. 14, 1921, but President Warren Harding had issued a proclamation that the formal state of war with Germany had legally ceased four months earlier, which was upheld by subsequent court decisions.
This appears to uphold executive power to end a state of war under the President’s inherent Article II powers just like the power to end a treaty, and so it is conceivable the President could impound military assistance overseas under those same powers that might cause the U.S. to become obligated in a war if the President was concerned about the national security implications.
In this case, we’re discussing non-treaty security assurance obligations that might drag the U.S. into a wider war involving Russia, Europe and the possible discharge of nuclear weapons.
Is the position of the National Security Council “resisters” that President Trump, or any other president, could terminate the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances executive agreement of 1994, promising to protect the territory of Ukraine, but that he would still be obligated to provide weapons being used to wage war there?
This is an area where power to conduct foreign affairs has to give one way or another.
Article II would appear facially to side with the executive, but these are all complex constitutional questions. Ones that might be ultimately decided by the Supreme Court, that is, if the President had chosen to permanently impound the foreign aid funds due for Ukraine as an exercise of his foreign affairs powers under Article II.
That he briefly considered submitting to Congress a rescission, pausing the funding temporarily, and ultimately releasing it on Sept. 11, however renders the question moot.
One need only consider the alternative: What if President Trump had followed through and submitted a request for rescinding the funds before the end of the fiscal year? Then, under the statute, it would have been up to Congress to approve the rescission or not. They would have had an up or down vote, and that would have probably settled the question.
Now, House Democrats wish to impeach the President for merely considering a rescission or some other means of ending U.S. involvement in the Ukrainian civil war.
Trump spent the money. There is no case for saying he violated the statute that appropriated the monies. But even if there had been a dispute, the proper venue would have been the courts to settle whether the statute obligated the President to assist in a foreign war over his objections.
Arguing about the constitutionality of a complex question, such as whether the Impoundment Control Act is constitution, is not a high crime or misdemeanor, it is a commonplace dispute between the elected branches that the judicial branch was intended to resolve. But not in this case since the monies were ultimately spent. There is nothing left to resolve. Trump and members of Congress worked it out, and OMB released the funds.
A better question is what about those bureaucrats at the State and Defense Departments, and the National Security Council, and yes, perhaps former National Security Advisor Bolton, if he was siding with them, who briefly thought they alone could apportion the monies without the Office of Management and Budget’s approval to release the monies, while the President and Congress negotiated a resolution to the funding dispute? It is they, not the President, who were acting outside the law and should be subject to reprimand.
When it comes to the execution of foreign affairs powers, employees of the executive branch must act in accordance with the President’s policies, or else it is they, and not the President, who are the ones acting above the supreme law of the land, which includes the Constitution’s Article II vesting of executive power solely in the President.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Sen. Johnson letter proves no quid pro on military aid,
exonerates President Trump
Nov. 22, 2019, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement in response to a Nov. 18 letter from Sen. Ron Johnson detailing a conversation he had with President Donald Trump on Aug. 31 when the President said there was no quid pro quo on military assistance, long before the anonymous CIA so-called whistleblower complaint ever became public:
“According to Senate Homeland Security Chairman Ron Johnson, he directly asked President Trump on Aug. 31 if there was a quid pro quo for Ukrainian military assistance to be released. The President told Johnson, 'No way. I would never do that. Who told you that?' This was the day before Vice President Pence met with Ukrainian President Zelensky, after which out-of-the-loop U.S. Ambassador Sondland 'presumed' and suggested a quid pro quo to a Ukrainian presidential aide that became ground zero for the whole quid pro quo confusion.
“The simple fact that President Trump told Chairman Johnson on Aug. 31 long before the so-called whistleblower complaint was ever made public that there was no quid pro quo and alluded to the probable release of the aid, stating 'We're reviewing it now, and you'll probably like my final decision,' indicating he would support it, which he did on Sept. 11, effectively ends every conspiracy theory laden timeline that Adam Schiff has concocted. Every person who testified to Schiff's committee was asked about a quid pro quo, and every witness who thought there was one, and Senator Johnson too received their second-hand information from Sondland, who was demonstrably wrong. The idea that the President craftily shifted his position when the political heat rose, is blown away by the fact that he told Johnson our policy position was no quid pro quo, demonstrating that the hold on the aid was truly an evaluation of whether Ukraine's corruption made the aid ill-advised and what Europe could to provide more on its end. The impeachment egg that Schiff and Pelosi find on their face can be directly traced to patient zero Ambassador Gordon Sondland, fueled by their partisan desire to impeach Trump at all costs making them willing to believe anything without verifying the facts.
“The impeachment inquiry is damaging our nation, and this clear exoneration of President Trump should be used by Speaker Nancy Pelosi to stop this partisan sham and get back to work.”
To view online: https://getliberty.org/2019/11/sen-johnson-letter-proves-no-quid-pro-on-military-aid-exonerates-president-trump/
ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured report from the Washington Examiner’s Daniel Chaitin and Jerry Dunleavy, the FBI agent under criminal investigation for falsifying a document related to the top secret surveillance of the Trump campaign in 2016 is a lawyer who worked on the Mueller probe and is said to have altered an email in a bid to obtain a renewal of the surveillance:
Mueller lawyer with anti-Trump bias is ex-FBI official facing FISA criminal investigation
By Daniel Chaitin and Jerry Dunleavy
The FBI lawyer who is under criminal investigation for allegedly falsifying a document related to the surveillance of a Trump campaign adviser expressed negative opinions of President Trump in messages to colleagues.
Kevin Clinesmith, who once was part of special counsel Robert Mueller's team, has been identified as the attorney who faces a potential criminal charge as part of U.S. Attorney John Durham's expansive criminal investigation into the origins of the Russia inquiry, according to the New York Times.
As part of the Justice Department watchdog's now-completed investigation into alleged surveillance abuses, Clinesmith was found to have altered an email that was used by officials as they prepared an application renewal to present before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to obtain a warrant to electronically surveil Carter Page, a onetime foreign policy adviser for the Trump campaign.
Clinesmith was an attorney with the FBI’s National Security and Cyber Law Branch and worked under FBI General Counsel James Baker and Deputy General Counsel Trisha Anderson. He resigned two months ago after being interviewed by DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz's team, who sent a referral to Durham, the prosecutor from Connecticut tasked with reviewing the Russia case by Attorney General William Barr.
Eagerly anticipated by Trump's allies, Howoritz's report is expected to be released to the public on Dec. 9, the inspector general announced this week. They believe it will reveal an effort to undermine Trump's 2016 campaign in which the FBI misled the FISA court in its reliance on an unverified dossier compiled by British ex-spy Christopher Steele, whose research about Trump and his associates was partially funded by Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign and the Democratic National Committee through the Perkins Coie law firm.
Democrats, as well as current and former FBI officials, have dismissed allegations of wrongdoing and have raised concerns that information about U.S. intelligence-gathering could be leveraged to discredit former special counsel Robert Mueller.
Horowitz previously identified Clinesmith as one of the FBI officials who conveyed a bias against Trump in text messages, after which he was kicked out of Mueller's Russia investigation team in February 2018. Two other FBI officials who were forced out of Mueller's team for similar anti-Trump text messages were Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, both of whom have also left the bureau.
In a lengthy instant message exchange between Clinesmith and another FBI employee on Nov. 9, 2016 — the day after Trump’s presidential victory — he lamented Trump’s win and worried about the role he’d played in the investigation into Trump and his campaign.
“My god damned name is all over the legal documents investigating his staff,” Clinesmith said, adding, “So, who knows if that breaks to him what he is going to do.”
A couple weeks later, on Nov. 22, 2016, he said, “Hell no” when asked by another FBI attorney if he was “rethink[ing] [his] commitment to the Trump administration.”
“Viva la resistance,” Clinesmith added.
In a scathing July 2018 report by Horowitz, Clinesmith was identified as "F.B.I. Attorney 2." He defended himself, claiming his messages only reflected his personal views. He asserted his opinions did not affect his work.
The initial FISA application and three renewals targeting Page required the approval of top members of the FBI, the DOJ, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, but they were also handled by lower-level officials. The initial warrant application was approved in October 2016, and the final renewal came in June 2017.
Under suspicion of being a Russian agent, Page became a subject of interest in the FBI's counterintelligence investigation, called Crossfire Hurricane, which began in July 2016 and was later wrapped into Mueller's inquiry. Page was never charged with a crime as part of Mueller's investigation, which failed to establish criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin, and denied being an agent for Russia.
Last summer, the Justice Department took the unprecedented step of releasing more than 400 redacted pages of top-secret documents on the FISA warrant obtained to wiretap Page after Trump declassified their existence.