
There were a couple of ways to think about the Trump administrationās about-face on releasing the files on Americaās most notorious sex criminal, Jeffrey Epstein.
The most obvious explanation was that the members of President Trumpās administration had been aping him in his method of political warfare: exaggerating the connections between Epstein and Americaās business and political elite and those elitesā involvement with procuring and trafficking underage girls.Ā
This is the cynical answer, which is oftentimes a good one when talking about politicians. And if thatās what happened, then the scandal would be that Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and others lied about the case and then failed to develop an effective exit strategy for their scheme, wrongly believing that they could manage the disappointment of their supporters when the jig was up.
That wouldnāt have been a crazy miscalculation to make. Trump has pulled off exactly that maneuver many times, whether it was implicating a television host in the death of a congressional intern, that Sen. Ted Cruzās (R-Texas) father was part of the plot to kill President John F. Kennedy, or that former President Obama was actually born in Kenya.
As Trump said of the Cruz smear, āOf course I donāt believe that. I wouldnāt believe it, but I did say ālet people read it.āāĀ
Thatās the let-bygones-be-bygones approach. Trump explains this as being a ācounterpucher.ā Itās not that truth is the first casualty, it is that truth is immaterial. Itās just the games people play, easily forgiven by supporters who donāt mind some rough justice for political foes.
Then there are those untruths that Trump never abandons, most famously his claim that he won the 2020 presidential election. Thatās the āwidening gyreā approach.
In such matters, Trumpās specific claims often fall apart, but his allies discover evidence of “something” in the same neighborhood. This is the old āseriously, but not literallyā dodge, by which supporters can say Trump wasnāt exactly right, but he was pointing at something real ā something they wanted to believe, what they might call āfake but accurate.ā
Perhaps Bondi and Patel believed they were doing some version of these approaches: fabulism in service of political gains against targets unloved by anyone on the right. But if thatās what it was, they failed to follow Trumpās lead in the general tactic or in this specific case.
Trump had for years been soft-pedaling the Epstein stuff. The two had been friends and cads about town in Palm Beach, Fla., and Manhattan in the 1990s, but Trump had distanced himself during his 2016 presidential run, explaining that when Epstein was charged with sex crimes a decade prior, the future president had barred him from Trumpās Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and cut all ties.Ā
But Epstein kept coming back to haunt him. When federal prosecutors nailed Epstein in 2019, it was not only the Trump Justice Department doing the busting, but the probe implicated Trumpās then-secretary of Labor, Alexander Acosta, as the author of the earlier sweetheart deal that let Epstein skate on federal charges when Acosta was the U.S. attorney in Miami.
Acosta got the boot from the Trump Cabinet, and the feds threw the book at Epstein, but it was under the Trump administrationās supervision that Epstein was found dead in his cell at a federal jail in New York. All the while, Trump kept the story at arm’s length.Ā
The next year, when Epsteinās partner in crime, Ghislaine Maxwell, was charged with the crimes for which she is now serving a 20-year sentence, Trump was again offered the chance to expound on the case but again hedged.Ā
āI donāt know,ā Trump said at the time. āI havenāt really been following it too much. I just wish her well, frankly. Iāve met her numerous times over the years, especially since I lived in Palm Beach, and I guess they lived in Palm Beach. But I wish her well, whatever it is.ā
Oh.
Trump, who wasnāt queasy about intimating that his foes were murderers or secret Kenyans, was given the chance during a losing presidential campaign to exploit the Epstein case by highlighting Epsteinās connections to prominent Democrats, particularly his old friends turned enemies, Bill and Hillary Clinton. But he passed, sending a pretty clear message to his team that this was not a place to swing freely.
Which leads us to the only other explanation available prior to Saturday: Bondi and Patel had been telling the truth before but are now part of a cover-up.Ā
That one doesnāt work for Democrats or the mainstream press. An inspector general had determined during the Biden administration that Epsteinās death had been the result of negligence, not murder, and the Justice Department seemed to close the book on the case. If one believed that finding, then Patel and Bondi could at most be guilty of unseemly politics, hardly a capital offense in Washington. Just a dose of Harry Reid-ing.
But if you donāt believe what the Biden administration said, then the range of potential misconduct would become much, much wider.
That was the world as we knew it on Friday: Either the Trump Justice Department was caught in a politically motivated lie or it was involved in an ongoing cover-up on behalf of Trump, or the ādeep stateā or to keep a blackmail scheme going or ⦠anything, really. Thatās the thing about cover-ups: If their existence is revealed, but allowed to stay in place, the imagination is the only limit to conjecture about what might be underneath.Ā
Trump has proved this again and again about Hillary Clintonās secret email server, former President Bidenās mental decline, and the FBIās investigation into Russian interference in 2016.Ā
Then on Saturday, Trump introduced a third possibility: That there was a cover-up, but it was a virtuous cover-up, because what was being concealed was itself fake.Ā
He announced: āWhy are we giving publicity to Files written by Obama, Crooked Hillary, [Former FBI Director James] Comey, [former CIA Director John] Brennan, and the Losers and Criminals of the Biden Administration. … They created the Epstein Files, just like they created the FAKE Hillary Clinton/Christopher Steele Dossier that they used on me, and now my so-called āfriendsā are playing right into their hands.ā
This puts a sharper edge on what Trump said in a 2024 interview, expressing reservations about releasing the Epstein files because āyou donāt want to affect peopleās lives if itās phony stuff in there, because itās a lot of phony stuff with that whole world.ā In the updated spin, itās not passively āphony stuff,ā but āRadical Left inspired Documents.ā
This looks like Trump employing the āwidening gyre.ā In a rhetorical corner but unable to simply shrug it off, Trump raises the stakes. Itās not that theyāre covering up the Epstein files, you see, itās much, much bigger. It also has the benefit of making clear that anyone pushing for the release of the files is working for the bad guys, not against them.
Whether or not that works depends on many things, but chief among them is how willing his underlings are to efface themselves.
Bondi is obviously pretty willing to eat crow here, but Patel may be a different matter. That is certainly true of Patelās deputy, Dan Bongino.
If those folks werenāt lying before, getting them to do so now is a tall order. Their credibility with the movement that championed them will be shredded if the administration sticks with the current line.
In that way, we have the first Trump scandal thatās really about a post-Trump GOP.
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