Clintons’ carelessness puts Obama in awkward position

What should disturb the US president is that the email transgression is not a one-off

Barack Obama looks on as presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton speaks during a campaign rally at the Charlotte Convention Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Obama thinks Clinton has the specific skillset that is required of the next president. Photograph: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Barack Obama looks on as presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton speaks during a campaign rally at the Charlotte Convention Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Obama thinks Clinton has the specific skillset that is required of the next president. Photograph: Doug Mills/The New York Times

It says a lot about our relationship with Hillary Clinton that she seems well on her way to becoming Madam President because she's not getting indicted. If she were still at the State Department, she could be getting fired for being, as the FBI director told Congress, "extremely careless" with top-secret information.

Instead, she's on a glide path to a big promotion. That's the corkscrew way things go with the Clintons, who are staying true to their reputation as the Tom and Daisy Buchanan of American politics. Their vast carelessness drags down everyone around them, but they persevere, even thrive.

In a mere 11 days, arrogant, selfish actions by the Clintons contaminated three of the purest brands in Washington – Barack Obama, James Comey and Loretta Lynch – and jeopardised the futures of Hillary's most loyal aides. It's quaint, looking back at her appointment as secretary of state, how Obama tried to get Hillary without the shadiness. (Which is what we all want.)

The president and his aides attempted to keep a rein on Clinton's State Department – refusing to let her bring in her hit man, Sidney Blumenthal. But in the end, Hillary's goo got on Obama anyhow. On Tuesday, after Comey managed to make both Democrats and Republicans angry by indicting Clinton politically but not legally, Barry and Hillary flew to Charlotte, North Carolina, for their first joint campaign appearance.

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Awkward position

Obama was left in the awkward position of vouching for Hillary’s “steady judgment” to run an angry, violent, jittery nation on the very day his FBI director lambasted her errant judgment on circumventing the State Department email system, making it clear that she had been lying to the American public for the last 16 months.

Comey, who was then yanked up to Capitol Hill for a hearing on Thursday, revealed that instead of no emails with classified information, as Hillary had insisted, there were 110, of those turned over to the State Department. Instead of Clinton’s assurances that the server in the basement in Chappaqua had never been breached, Comey said it was possible that hostile actors had hacked Clinton’s email account. Among the emails not given to State, he said at least three contained classified information.

Hillary had already compromised the president, who feels he needs her to cement his legacy. Obama angered FBI agents when he was interviewed on CBS' 60 Minutes last fall and undermined the bureau's investigation by exonerating Hillary before the FBI was done with its work, saying pre-emptively, "This is not a situation in which America's national security was endangered."

Hillary wilfully put herself above the rules – again – and a president, campaign and party are all left twisting themselves into pretzels defending her. Obama aimed to have no shadows, but the Clintons operate in shadows. After Bill Clinton crossed the tarmac in Phoenix to have a long chat with Lynch, the attorney general confessed that the ill-advised meeting had "cast a shadow" over her department's investigation into his wife and that she would feel constrained to follow the recommendation of the FBI.

Mistake

“I certainly wouldn’t do it again,” Lynch said, admitting it hit her “painfully” that she had made a mistake dancing with the

Arkansas

devil in the pale moonlight. The meeting seemed even more suspect a week later, when the

New York Times

reported that Hillary might let Lynch stay on in a new Clinton administration.

The fallout from the email scandal has clouded the futures of longtime Hillary aides Cheryl Mills, Huma Abedin and Jake Sullivan, who were also deemed extremely careless by Comey for their handling of classified information.

The Times reported that they could face tough questions as they seek security clearances for diplomatic or national security posts. (Not to mention remiss in not pushing back on Clinton about the private server.)

Obama thinks Washington is so broken that the next president will need a specific skill set to function, and he thinks Hillary has that. But what should disturb Obama is that the email transgression is not a one-off.

It's part of a long pattern of ethical slipping and sliding, obsessive secrecy and paranoia, and collateral damage. Comey's verdict that Hillary was "negligent" was met with sighs, not shock. We know who Hillary and Bill are now. We've been held hostage to their predilections and braided intrigues for a long time. (On the Hill, Comey refused to confirm or deny that he's investigating the Clinton Foundation, with its unseemly tangle of donors and people doing business with State.)

We’re resigned to the Clintons focusing on their viability and disregarding the consequences of their heedless actions on others. They’re always offering a Faustian deal. This year’s election bargain: put up with our iniquities or get Donald Trump’s short fingers on the nuclear button.

The Clintons work hard but don't play by the rules. Imagine them in the White House with the benefit of low expectations.

– (New York Times)