A patron at the Axelrad bar in Houston watches a television as former FBI director James Comey is sworn in before he testified at a U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on June 8 2017. John L. Mone AP
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Amid a bruising presidential campaign with insults, slurs and threats of violence at rallies, a poll last June found America’s partisan divide deeper than at any point in nearly a quarter-century. A majority of Democrats and Republicans in the Pew Research Center poll rated the opposing party “very unfavorably” and sizable shares of both parties said the other side stirred feelings of “not just frustration, but fear and anger.”

A poll released just days after Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton found a yawning chasm between their supporters when it came to even finding common ground on the biggest problems facing the nation. They could only agree that drug addiction and the nation’s deteriorating roads and bridges were a priority.

The partisanship is also fueled by an antipathy toward the federal government, with voter frustration toward lawmakers and their inability to deliver on promises made by both sides of the aisle.

The refusal to look beyond the partisan silos has some observers worried, especially with Russia seeking to disrupt American politics by sowing dissent in its democratic institutions, using disinformation campaigns and cyberattacks.

Comey testified that Trump had shown little interest in the details about Russia election interference, beyond an initial briefing. And Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., complained Sunday to Fox News Sunday that Trump “continues to diminish” the threat of Russian meddling.

Trump sees the inquiry as Congress “suggesting he did not win fairly,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told CBS’s Face the Nation, adding that although he’d not seen any evidence that Trump’s campaign had colluded with Russia, “I see all kind of evidence of the Russians trying to destroy our election and destroy democracy throughout the world.”

Yet the partisan sniping may only cloud that picture.

“What Russian active measures do is they exploit the weaknesses that we present, and partisanship is a great weakness,” said Heather Conley, a senior vice president at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former deputy assistant secretary of state.

“Slowly,” she said, “you are eroding your faith in your leaders and the institutions and that is exactly what the Kremlin is interested in. The Russians are starting this, but we are doing this to ourselves.”

Perhaps that’s what Comey, who served under Presidents George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and briefly, Trump, had in mind when he warned the Senate that Russia will be back in 2018 and 2020: its target America itself.

June 8, 2017