
Our democracy is in serious danger.
President
 Trump is either totally compromised by the Russians or is a towering 
fool, or both, but either way he has shown himself unwilling or unable 
to defend America against a Russian campaign to divide and undermine our
 democracy.
That
 is, either Trump’s real estate empire has taken large amounts of money 
from shady oligarchs linked to the Kremlin — so much that they literally
 own him; or rumors are true that he engaged in sexual misbehavior while
 he was in Moscow running the Miss Universe contest, which Russian 
intelligence has on tape and he doesn’t want released; or Trump actually
 believes Russian President Vladimir Putin when he says he is innocent 
of intervening in our elections — over the explicit findings of Trump’s 
own C.I.A., N.S.A. and F.B.I. chiefs.
In
 sum, Trump is either hiding something so threatening to himself, or 
he’s criminally incompetent to be commander in chief. It is impossible 
yet to say which explanation for his behavior is true, but it seems 
highly likely that one of these scenarios explains Trump’s refusal to 
respond to Russia’s direct attack on our system — a quiescence that is 
simply unprecedented for any U.S. president in history. Russia is not 
our friend. It has acted in a hostile manner. And Trump keeps ignoring 
it all.
Up
 to now, Trump has been flouting the norms of the presidency. Now 
Trump’s behavior amounts to a refusal to carry out his oath of office — 
to protect and defend the Constitution. Here’s an imperfect but close 
analogy: It’s as if George W. Bush had said after 9/11: “No big deal. I 
am going golfing over the weekend in Florida and blogging about how it’s
 all the Democrats’ fault — no need to hold a National Security Council 
meeting.”
At
 a time when the special prosecutor Robert Mueller — leveraging several 
years of intelligence gathering by the F.B.I., C.I.A. and N.S.A. — has 
brought indictments against 13 Russian nationals and three Russian 
groups — all linked in some way to the Kremlin — for interfering with 
the 2016 U.S. elections, America needs a president who will lead our 
nation’s defense against this attack on the integrity of our electoral 
democracy.
What
 would that look like? He would educate the public on the scale of the 
problem; he would bring together all the stakeholders — state and local 
election authorities, the federal government, both parties and all the 
owners of social networks that the Russians used to carry out their 
interference — to mount an effective defense; and he would bring 
together our intelligence and military experts to mount an effective 
offense against Putin — the best defense of all.
What
 we have instead is a president vulgarly tweeting that the Russians are 
“laughing their asses off in Moscow” for how we’ve been investigating 
their interventions — and exploiting the terrible school shooting in 
Florida — and the failure of the F.B.I. to properly forward to its Miami
 field office a tip on the killer — to throw the entire F.B.I. under the
 bus and create a new excuse to shut down the Mueller investigation.
Think
 for a moment how demented was Trump’s Saturday night tweet: “Very sad 
that the FBI missed all of the many signals sent out by the Florida 
school shooter. This is not acceptable. They are spending too much time 
trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign — there is no 
collusion. Get back to the basics and make us all proud!”
To
 the contrary. Our F.B.I., C.I.A. and N.S.A., working with the special 
counsel, have done us amazingly proud. They’ve uncovered a Russian 
program to divide Americans and tilt our last election toward Trump — 
i.e., to undermine the very core of our democracy — and Trump is telling
 them to get back to important things like tracking would-be school 
shooters. Yes, the F.B.I. made a mistake in Florida. But it acted 
heroically on Russia. What is more basic than protecting American 
democracy?
It
 is so obvious what Trump is up to: Again, he is either a total sucker 
for Putin or, more likely, he is hiding something that he knows the 
Russians have on him, and he knows that the longer Mueller’s 
investigation goes on, the more likely he will be to find and expose it.
Donald,
 if you are so innocent, why do you go to such extraordinary lengths to 
try to shut Mueller down? And if you are really the president — not 
still head of the Trump Organization, who moonlights as president, which
 is how you so often behave — why don’t you actually lead — lead not 
only a proper cyberdefense of our elections, but also an offense against
 Putin.
Putin
 used cyberwarfare to poison American politics, to spread fake news, to 
help elect a chaos candidate, all in order to weaken our democracy. We 
should be using our cyber-capabilities to spread the truth about Putin —
 just how much money he has stolen, just how many lies he has spread, 
just how many rivals he has jailed or made disappear — all to weaken his
 autocracy. That is what a real president would be doing right now.
My
 guess is what Trump is hiding has to do with money. It’s something 
about his financial ties to business elites tied to the Kremlin. They 
may own a big stake in him. Who can forget that quote from his son 
Donald Trump Jr. from back in 2008: “Russians make up a pretty 
disproportionate cross section of a lot of our assets.” They may own our
 president.
But
 whatever it is, Trump is either trying so hard to hide it or is so 
naïve about Russia that he is ready to not only resist mounting a proper
 defense of our democracy, he’s actually ready to undermine some of our 
most important institutions, the F.B.I. and Justice Department, to keep 
his compromised status hidden.
That must not be tolerated. This is code red. The biggest threat to the integrity of our democracy today is in the Oval Office.
 
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