From the Left

/

Politics

A tale of two Comeys

Ruth Marcus on

Less than a month later, left alone with the president in the Oval Office, Comey again ducked a direct challenge. As Comey testified, when Trump expressed his "hope" that Comey could drop the case against fired national security adviser Michael Flynn, the FBI director lunged for their common ground: "He's a good guy."

Asked why he did not rebuff the president, Comey offered, "Maybe if I were stronger I would have. I was so stunned by the conversation that I just took it in." This was not Comey the brave but Comey the self-protective bureaucrat. He didn't confront, but he did write a memo to the file.

Nor was this the first administration in which Comey chose his battles with an eye to political realities. When former Attorney General Loretta Lynch asked him to call the Hillary Clinton email probe a "matter," not an "investigation," Comey testified, "I just said, all right ... this isn't a hill worth dying on."

And then there is the matter of Comey's bank shot leak, from him to Columbia law professor Dan Richman to, anonymously of course, The New York Times -- all in the service, Comey testified, of seeing a special counsel appointed. Not exactly the behavior of a Boy Scout, unless there is now a Merit Badge in Machiavelli.

That is not to say that Comey was wrong to get out the word about his chilling encounter. It's just that his aura of by-the-book self-righteousness comes with a slightly less honorable tinge. Comey has managed to infuriate both Democrats -- with his imperious decision to assume an outsize role on the Clinton, ahem, matter -- and Republicans, a decade ago and now.

Listening to Comey's testimony called to mind Benjamin Wittes' account of a conversation when, Comey, still in his job, expressed "palpable" concerns about deputy attorney general nominee Rod Rosenstein, a career prosecutor who had managed to keep his political appointment under Republican and Democratic presidents. "Rod is a survivor," Comey observed. As Wittes paraphrased: "You don't get to survive that long across administrations without making compromises."

 

Did Comey recognize something of himself? Once he was, or presented himself as, the archetype of unyielding probity, now he has morphed into something more complex -- less heroic, more flesh-in-blood. This Comey is more flawed and, perhaps for that very reason, more believable.

========

Ruth Marcus' email address is ruthmarcus@washpost.com.

(c) 2017, Washington Post Writers Group


 

 

Comics

Mike Smith David Horsey A.F. Branco Bill Bramhall Gary Varvel Jeff Danziger