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[b][center][big]Why James Comey Had to Go[/big][/center][/b]
[i][b]The FBI head’s sense of perfect virtue led him to ignore his own enormous conflicts[/b][/i]

Testifying last week before the Senate Judiciary Committee, James Comey recalled a moment that should have held more significance for him than it did. At the height of the presidential campaign, President Obama’s attorney general, Loretta Lynch, had chosen to meet with Bill Clinton on an airport tarmac. That, said the now-former FBI director, “was the capper for me.” Hillary Clinton’s emails were being probed, but Ms. Lynch was too conflicted to “credibly complete the investigation.” So Mr. Comey stepped in.

Donald Trump and senior Justice Department leaders might appreciate the impulse. According to Democrats and the media, Attorney General Jeff Sessions is too conflicted to recommend sacking Mr. Comey; the Trump administration is too conflicted to name a successor; the entire Justice Department and the Republican Congress are too conflicted to conduct true oversight.

Entirely missing from this narrative is the man who was perhaps the most conflicted of all: James Comey. The FBI head was so good at portraying himself as Washington’s last Boy Scout—the only person who ever did the right thing—that few noticed his repeated refusal to do the right thing. Mr. Comey might still have a job if, on any number of occasions, he’d acknowledged his own conflicts and stepped back.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s memo to Mr. Sessions expertly excoriated Mr. Comey’s decision to “usurp” Ms. Lynch’s authority and his “gratuitously” fulsome July press conference. But Mr. Comey’s dereliction of duty preceded that—by his own admission. Remember, he testified that the Lynch-Clinton meeting was but the “capper.” Before that, he told lawmakers, “a number of things had gone on which I can’t talk about yet that made me worry the department leadership could not credibly complete the investigation.”

We don’t know what these things were, but it seems the head of the FBI had lost confidence—even before TarmacGate—that the Justice Department was playing it anywhere near straight in the Clinton probe. So what should an honor-bound FBI director do in such a conflicted situation? Call it out. Demand that Ms. Lynch recuse herself and insist on an appropriate process to ensure public confidence. Resign, if need be. Instead Mr. Comey waited until the situation had become a crisis, and then he ignored all protocol to make himself investigator, attorney, judge and jury.

By the end of that 15-minute July press conference, [b][i]Mr. Comey had infuriated both Republicans and Democrats, who were now universally convinced he was playing politics. He’d undermined his and his agency’s integrity. No matter his motives, an honor-bound director would have acknowledged that his decision jeopardized his ability to continue effectively leading the agency. He would have chosen in the following days—or at least after the election—to step down. Mr. Comey didn’t.[/i][/b]

Which leads us to Mr. Comey’s most recent and obvious conflict of all—likely a primary reason he was fired: the leaks investigation (or rather non-investigation). So far the only crime that has come to light from this Russia probe is the rampant and felonious leaking of classified information to the press. Mr. Trump and the GOP rightly see this as a major risk to national security. While the National Security Agency has been cooperating with the House Intelligence Committee and allowing lawmakers to review documents that might show the source of the leaks, Mr. Comey’s FBI has resolutely refused to do the same.

Why? The press reports that the FBI obtained a secret court order last summer to monitor Carter Page. It’s still unclear exactly under what circumstances the government was listening in on former Trump adviser Mike Flynn and the Russian ambassador, but the FBI was likely involved there, too. Meaning Mr. Comey’s agency is a prime possible source of the leaks.

[b][i]In last week’s Senate hearing, Chairman Chuck Grassley pointed out the obvious: The entire top leadership of the FBI is suspect. “So how,” Mr. Grassley asked, “can the Justice Department guarantee the integrity of the investigations without designating an agency, other than the FBI, to gather the facts and eliminate senior FBI officials as suspects?” Mr. Comey didn’t provide much of an answer.[/i][/b]

All this—the Russia probe, the unmasking, the leaks, the fraught question of whether the government was inappropriately monitoring campaigns, the allegations of interference in a presidential campaign—is wrapped together, with Mr. Comey at the center. The White House and House Republicans couldn’t have faith that the FBI would be an honest broker of the truth. Mr. Comey should have realized this, recused himself from ongoing probes, and set up a process to restore trust. He didn’t. So the White House did it for him.

Colleagues describe Mr. Comey as an honorable man. The problem seems to be that his sense of perfect virtue made him blind to his own conflicts and the mess he had made. New leadership at the FBI is a chance for a fresh start.

Write to kim@wsj.com.

Appeared in the May. 12, 2017, print edition.
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Ynotisay · M
Just for some context.

Penned by Kimberly A. Strassel. A hard line conservative winger who writes a weekly [i]opinion[/i] column in the typically conservative WSJ.

Full of innuendo, this is a more subtle way of perpetuating Trump's "Grandstander" claim.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@Ynotisay:

When liberals disagree...destroy the messenger.

I hear the same ole tired excuses. WSJ, Washington Times, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, FOX......BAAAD

NYT, Washington Post, LA Times...all good and honest.

[b]samueltyler2[/b]...said it best. The truth lies somewhere in between.
Ynotisay · M
@lov2smile: Destroy the messenger or identify and consider the messenger?
Grown ups consider the messenger.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@Ynotisay:

Ouch, feel better now?
Ynotisay · M
@lov2smile: Feel better? Not really. You're pretty irrelevant to me. Just thought I'd toss a little something out there in response to your childish comment. Guess I hit a hit a nerve. Clearly that's because you know you didn't even THINK to consider who wrote this piece. Don't worry about it. It's pretty common. Unfortunate but common.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@Ynotisay:
You come across as a good liberal, and it could be fun to debate with you. But you seem to enjoy derogatory and demeaning statements rather that intelligent comment.

If you disagree with something I say or post, say so, [u]and tell me why[/u]...if not? well, nothing more to say.
Ynotisay · M
Go read my initial comment again. That might take care of your [u]and tell me why.[/u]
And a "good Liberal?"
Please. Go away.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@Ynotisay:

Why do liberals always try to hide their stripes?
The answer? Because the American people would not agree with what your vision of America is.

I'm conservative and proud of it.
Ynotisay · M
@lov2smile: It appears you're under the impression that I give a shit about you or your opinions. I'm not sure why that would be. I thought "go away' was pretty clear.
I'd rather not block you but I'm also trying to rid my little world of those I consider to be an enemy to the country and, just as importantly, an enemy to reason, intelligence and decency.
Write me again and I'll take that as your tacit approval to drain my swamp.
As I'm SURE you won't be able to stop yourself from getting the last word in I'll have my block finger stretched and ready to go.
Thanks.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@Ynotisay:

Just one question before you go..

What makes you think I care if you block me or not?
Be my guest, we're on a public forum here.

You are confused. You say you are not interested and yet you keep coming back to read and respond.

Keep one thing in mind though....To be open minded, means to consider both sides of an opinion or thought.

You have proven....Just more liberal tolerance and compassion
@lov2smile: Ynotisay is hypnotized by the letter D. A political Neanderthal who marches to the beat of "D good. R bad." Then clubs and drags his partner into his cave. There is no reasoning with those who are not grounded by principles.
lov2smile · 36-40, F
@BizSuitStacy:

He's a very strange person. Comes on to a story that I posted, calls me names and then threatened to block me. YIKES!

I think al of of these people are still in denial.
@lov2smile: I had a similar experience with him on a gun rights piece I penned. Long story short...he had copied and pasted some BS from another website about the assault weapons ban from 1994-2004. I pointed out the BS, referencing the actual details from the Department of Justice published review, suggesting he actually read THAT report. His response..."f### you for talking to me that way. I'm going to block you. Blah, blah, blah."

Translation...how dare you point out the truth and actually and burst my liberal bubble.