“It’s not a Republican thing or a Democratic thing. It really is an American thing.”
That’s what former FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee about Russian meddling into the 2016 election. Yet much of the political reaction over recent days was just the opposite, providing the latest evidence that American politics is more polarized than ever, with much of the country – or at least its elected representatives — siding solidly red or blue.
“President Trump could jump off (Washington’s) Key Bridge tomorrow and half the country would believe he jumped,” said veteran political author Richard Reeves. “The other half would be convinced it was murder.”
Comey, the lawman who has served under Republican and Democratic presidents, delivered a staggering accusation: that the president of the United States had lied and had prodded him to drop an active investigation into Trump’s national security adviser.
Yet many Republicans shrugged and pointed instead to Comey’s testimony about former Attorney General Loretta Lynch’s performance in the Hillary Clinton email case and his confession that he had asked a friend to leak to the New York Times the content of a memo detailing his meeting with Trump.
“If anything,” suggested Republican Party of Iowa chairman Jeff Kaufmann, “we should be looking into Comey for leaking his own internal memos.” And on Sunday, Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel called for an end to the investigation into whether Trump’s campaign had colluded with the Russians.
To Democrats, who at one time had assailed Comey’s handling of the Clinton email investigation, his testimony before Congress was proof of Trump’s perfidy: On the House floor, Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., a former prosecutor himself, said it was “obvious” Trump had committed obstruction of justice. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer extended an invitation for Trump to testify before Congress.