
Bill Barr Was Worse Than You Thought
The attorney general blustered, fought, and stalled his way through a contentious appearance before Congress.

The most revealing moment at Tuesdayās House Judiciary Committee hearing with Attorney General William Barr was actually several momentsālong awkward ones.
During the contentious hearing, Representative David Cicilline (D-R.I.) asked Barr what seemed like a straightforward question: āIs it ever appropriate, sir, for the president to solicit or accept foreign assistance in an election?ā
Instead of answering, Barr dodged and parried.
āIt depends what kind of assistance,ā he said.
Cicilline tried again. Speaking deliberately, he repeated the question: āIs it ever appropriate for the president or presidential candidate to accept or solicit foreign assistance of any kind in his or her election?ā
Finally, a full 15 seconds after he was first asked the question, Barr answered: āNo, itās not appropriate.ā
Notably, this is not the first time that Barr has struggled with that question. On May 1, 2019, Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.) also tried to get a straight answer from Barr.
āGoing forward, what if a foreign adversary offers a presidential candidate dirt on a competitor in 2020?ā Coons asked, suggesting North Korea as a possible actor. āDo you agree with me the campaign should immediately contact the FBI?ā
Barr hesitated, leaving a pause of at least 5 seconds.
āIf a foreign government? If a foreign intelligence service?ā Barr finally answered, parsing his words carefully. āIf a foreign intelligence service does, yes.ā
You can watch that clip here:

So here is the question: What was going through Barrās mind last May and then again today? It was an easy question for anyone who has taken the oath to protect the nation.
Why not snap out a quick reply and move on? What was the hesitation? What was going through his mind?
Should I make it clear that foreign interference is wrong? Or will that anger the president, the only audience I care about? How can I hedge?
But letās not overthink this, because thereās really no mystery here. Barr has told us who is he over and over.
Some of us thought that Barr would be pretty awful as Trumpās designated Roy Cohn. Back in April 2019, I offered āSeven Reasons Not to Trust William Barr.ā But Tuesday he reminded us that he has turned out to be even worse that the pessimists feared.
āYour opening statement reads like it was written by Alex Jones or Roger Stone,ā Representative Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) quipped. He exaggerated only slightly.
By now, Barr has established himself as a loyal defender of Trump, willing to make decisions that at the very least give the appearance that Barr is doing Trumpās personal bidding. Barr denies politics plays a role in his decisions while leading the Justice Department.
But on Tuesday, he did little to dissuade the criticism that Trumpās personal desires influence him. In his efforts to defend himself, Barr painted Trump as the consummate professional president, giving Barr ācomplete freedomā to do what he needs. āFrom my experience, the president has played a role properly and traditionally played by presidents,ā Barr testified. But this seems to understate the impact of Barrās performance. On issue after issue, the attorney general displayed his willingness to adapt himself to Trumpian bullsh*t, even if that included lying on the presidentās behalf:
Under questioning about the governmentās coronavirus response, Mr. Barr defended Mr. Trump by also falsely blaming former āPresident Obamaās mishandlingā of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for testing shortages and a ārun downā Strategic National Stockpile.
The first claim was a reference to a 2014 draft policy on laboratory-developed tests that was never finished or enforced. (The Justice Department plays no role in procuring and distributing tests.) The stockpile, which is the federal governmentās repository of medicines and medicinal products, contained more than $7 billion worth of supplies with Mr. Trump took office and had more than 16,660 ventilators available when the pandemic began.
Mr. Barrās description of protests last month in Washingtonās Lafayette Square and the federal response also mirrored that of Mr. Trump and his White House press secretary. St. Johnās Church āwas on fire,ā the attorney general said of a small fire in the basement. And he misleadingly insisted that āno tear gas was used,ā though the United States Park Police confirmed āthe use of smoke canisters and pepper balls.ā This is not normal stuff. Barr repeated Trumpās claims that mail-in voting would lead to massive fraud, attacked the credibility of National Guard whistleblower Adam DeMarco, and played the Antifa card to justify the surge of federal agents into the nationās cities. As former Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller tweeted:

But Barrās approach clearly appealed to the GOPās hacky-sack demo:

Two other things worth noting:
Despite all his tough-guy bravado, Barr has thin skin and at times he was clearly rattled:
When Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) asked Barr āunder penalty of perjuryā whether his past statements about the White House having fully cooperated with special counsel Robert S. Mueller IIIās investigation were true, Barr quipped that they were also wiseāand then growled at Neguse when he pivoted to the next question.
āYou said āunder penalty of perjuryāāIām going to answer the damn question,ā he said. He also struggled under questions from Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) about his hypocrisy on protests. She accused Barr of taking āan aggressive approach to Black Lives Matter protests, but not to right-wing extremists threatening to lynch a governor if itās for . . . the presidentās benefitā:
In Michigan when protesters carried guns and Confederate flags and swastikas and called for the governor of Michigan to be beheaded and shot and lynched, somehow you are not aware of that. Somehow you didnāt know about it so you didnāt send federal agents in to do to the presidentās supporters what you did to the presidentās protesters. . . . There is a real discrepancy in how you react as the attorney generalāthe top cop in this country. When white men with swastikas storm a government building with guns, there is no need for the president to āactivateā you, because theyāre getting the presidentās personal agenda done. But when black people and people of color protest police brutality, systemic racism, and the presidentās very own lack of response to those critical issues, then you forcibly remove them with armed federal officers [and] pepper bombs because they are considered terrorists by the president.
You can watch the exchange here:

It wasnāt his finest moment, but it probably played well enough in the White House. Which, after all, is all Bill Barr really cares about, isnāt it?