Can you imagine the danger to our republic if the Executive Branch could secretly, for months on end, and without any clear and compelling justification, surveil the very people in Congress conducting oversight of those agencies?
That chilling constitutional nightmare transpired. And we’re only getting the details about the separation-of-powers-eviscerating, civil liberties-undermining, and transparency-imperiling activity seven years after it started.
The revelations come in a recently released Justice Department Inspector General report. Like much of this corrupt activity, the story begins with Russiagate. In the spring and summer of 2017, the first year of the Trump presidency, CNN, The New York Times, and The Washington Post published articles containing classified information concerning Trump and Russia…
One of those targeted was a then-top staffer for Senate Judiciary Ranking Committee member Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, Jason Foster. I previously detailed his efforts to get to the bottom of the subpoena effort in a RealClearPolitics profile of his Empower Oversight nonprofit. The Senate Judiciary Committee was probing the Trump-Russia investigation.
For the full story, click here.