Days before the 2000 Presidential election, a Democratic partisan, who later boasted about his exquisite timing, disclosed that Republican candidate George W. Bush had been arrested for driving while intoxicated 24 years earlier, before he swore off Demon Rum. Without that revelation, it seems unlikely that the election would have been so harrowing close.
In September 2004, Dan Rather, the anchorman of CBS Evening News, reported that newly discovered documents showed that now-President George W. Bush had used political connections to get a post in the Texas Air National Guard, thus avoiding service in Vietnam (where his opponent had won a Silver Star) and had then shirked his Guard duties. The documents were quickly discredited as crude forgeries and probably had little impact. But if they had come out five days before the voting instead of 55. . . .
What brought these ancient roorbacks to my mind was the seventh installment of the “Twitter Files”, which recounts the FBI’s determined (and largely successful) efforts to suppress news about the contents of Hunter Biden’s famous laptop. Suppose that it had shown similar zeal to keep the 2000 and 2004 incidents out of the papers. Would any progressive doubt that the First Amendment was being trampled underfoot? Would high officials at the Bureau have kept their jobs? Would they have avoided prison?
Were there any mitigating factors in 2020? One might contend that Hunter Biden’s misdeeds didn’t have any bearing on his father’s fitness for office. Yet what George W. Bush did (or was accused of having done) decades before he ran for President had even less bearing. Or one could point to alleged foreign involvement in the Hunter affair. Yet the FBI took possession of the laptop months earlier. Either it analyzed the hard drive, in which case it knew that the material on it was genuine, or it didn’t, in which case it was in no position to spread insinuations of Russian disinformation.
Next to this scandal, J. Edgar Hoover at his worst was as free from sin as Mother Theresa.
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