The Big Lie That Barr Lied
https://news.yahoo.com/big-lie-barr-lied-183714501.html
Andrew C. McCarthy
,
National Review• May 3, 2019
I  originally  thought this was too stupid to write about. But stupid is like the  plague inside the Beltway — one person catches it and next thing you  know there’s an outbreak at MSNBC and the speaker of the House is  showing symptoms while her delirious minions tote ceramic chickens  around Capitol Hill.
 
So I give you: the Bill Barr perjury allegation.
We  are all entitled to our own opinions. But are we entitled to our own  facts? Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s bon mot says no, but Washington makes  you wonder. Like when spleen-venting about the supposedly outrageous,  unbelievable, disgraceful invocation of the word “spy” to describe  episodes of government spying is instantly followed by a 
New York Times story  about how the spying — er, I mean, court-authorized  electronic surveillance — coupled with the tasking of spies —  er, undercover agents — green-lighted by a foreign spy —  er, intelligence service — was more widespread than previously known.
If  I were a cynic, I’d think people were trying to get out in front of  some embarrassing revelations on the horizon. I might even be tempted to  speculate that progressives were trotting out their “Destroy Ken Starr”  template for Barr deployment (which, I suppose, means that 20 years  from now we’ll be reading about what a straight-arrow Barr was compared  to whomever Democrats are savaging at that point).
The  claim that Barr gave false testimony is frivolous. That is why, at  least initially, Democrats and their media echo chamber soft-pedaled it —  with such dishonorable exceptions as Mazie Horono, the Hawaii Democrat  who, somehow, is a United States senator. It’s tough to make the perjury  argument without any false or even inaccurate statements — though my  Fox News colleague Andrew Napolitano did give it the old college try. 
As recounted by The Hill,  he twisted himself into a pretzel, observing — try to follow this —  that the attorney general “probably misled” Congress and thus “he’s got a  problem” . . . although this purported dissembling didn’t really seem  to be, you know, an actual “lie” so . . . maybe it’s not a problem after  all. Or something.
I  assume that in his black-robe days, Judge Nap would have known better.  When meritless perjury cases are thrown out of court, judges are often  at pains to explain that the questioner who elicited the purportedly  false testimony bears the burden of clarity; the terms of the question  dictate the evaluation of the answer. In this instance, Barr’s April 9  testimony before the House Appropriations Committee was true and  accurate; if a misimpression set in after, it is because the relevant  questioning by Representative Charlie Crist (D., Fla.) has been ignored  or distorted.
Moreover,  because perjury is a serious felony allegation, judges and legal  analysts never rely on a general, selectively couched description of the  testimony — much less on the likes of 
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s because-I-said-so refrain  that Barr “lied to Congress” and “that’s a crime.” The testimony must  be examined, with emphasis on the words that were used (the questions as  well as the responses), and anything we can glean about the witness’s  demeanor (stingy? dodgy? forthcoming?).
The  mindless, no-need-to-check-the-record allegation against Barr goes like  this: The AG testified on April 9 that he had no idea why Special  Counsel Mueller was upset over the way 
Barr’s March 24 letter described Mueller’s report; but, in fact, Barr knew exactly why Mueller was upset because he had received the latter’s 
March 27 letter complaining about Barr’s missive.
Now, here is the exchange on which the perjury allegation is based, with my italics highlighting key portions:
CRIST: Reports have emerged recently, General, that 
members of the special counsel’s team are frustrated  at some level with the limited information included in your March 24th  letter . . . that it does not adequately or accurately necessarily  portray 
the report’s findings. Do you know 
what they’re referencing with that?
BARR: No, I don’t. I think — I think . . . 
I suspect that they probably wanted more put out,  but, in my view, I was not interested in putting out summaries or  trying to summarize because I think any summary, regardless of who  prepares it, not only runs the risk of, you know, being under-inclusive  or over-inclusive, but also, you know, would trigger a lot of discussion  and analysis that really should await everything coming out at once. So  I was not interested in a summary of the report. . . . I felt that I  should state the bottom line conclusions and I tried to use Special  Counsel Mueller’s own language in doing that.
When  we look at the actual words of this exchange, Barr’s testimony is  clearly accurate. And I don’t mean accurate in the hyper-technical,  Clintonesque “depends on what the definition of 
is is” sense. I  mean straightforward, unguarded, and evincing a willingness to  volunteer information beyond what the question sought.
Crist  did not ask a general question about Mueller’s reaction to Barr’s  letter; he asked a specific question about the reaction of Mueller’s  “team” to the Barr letter’s description of “the report’s findings.”  Regarding the March 24 letter’s rendering of this bottom line — namely,  Russia meddled, Trump did not collude, and Mueller failed to resolve the  obstruction question — Barr said he did not know what Mueller’s staff  was complaining about.
Barr  has known Mueller for nearly 30 years; when Mueller was the Criminal  Division chief in the Bush 41 Justice Department, he reported to Barr,  who was attorney general. It should come as no surprise, then, that Barr  was not getting his information from Mueller’s staff; 
he was getting it from Mueller directly.  Nor should it come as any surprise that, before releasing his March 24  letter to the public, Barr gave Mueller an opportunity to review it; nor  that Mueller declined that opportunity — given that he knows Barr well,  and knew Barr would not misrepresent the report (especially given that  the report would soon be public).
Three  days after Barr announced the report’s conclusions, Mueller sent his  letter, undoubtedly written by his staff. Mueller could simply have  called Barr on the phone, as he has done a million times; but the  staff’s partisan Democrats wanted a letter, which makes for much better  leak material. (The letter was, in fact, strategically leaked to the 
Washington Post  Tuesday night, right before Barr’s Wednesday morning Senate testimony.)  The day after receiving Mueller’s March 27 letter, Barr called Mueller  and pointedly asked whether he was claiming that Barr’s March 24 letter  articulating Mueller’s findings was inaccurate. Mueller responded that  he was making no such claim — he was, instead, irritated by the press  coverage of Barr’s letter. Mueller suggested the publication of  additional information from the report, including the report’s own  executive summaries, to explain more about why he decided not to resolve  the obstruction issue. But he did not claim Barr had misrepresented his  findings. (See 
Barr’s Senate testimony, starting at 39-minute mark.)
Again,  Barr’s contact was with Mueller, not Mueller’s team. His exchanges with  Mueller gave Barr no basis to know about any objection to his  description of the report’s findings — from Mueller or anyone else. The  fact that 
Mueller’s staff was leaking like a sieve to the 
Times, the 
Washington Post, and NBC News does not mean they were sharing with the attorney general what the 
Times described as “their simmering frustrations.”
That  is what Barr said in answer to Crist’s question about the report’s  findings. But to avoid the misimpression that he was parsing words  deceptively, Barr volunteered his perception that Mueller’s staff wanted  more information from the report to be publicized. That was consistent  with what can be inferred from Barr’s phone call with Mueller on March  28. And it was not news: Crist’s questions were based on the  aforementioned press accounts of leaks from Mueller’s staffers. They  were irked at the bad press they were receiving over Mueller’s  abdication on the question whether there was a prosecutable obstruction  case, and they had groused that there was much more to their report than  Barr’s letter conveyed. Of course, Barr never disputed this; as he  repeatedly explained, he undertook to render the conclusions, not  summarize the entire 448-page report.
Barr  decided that his way of making disclosure — the findings followed three  weeks later by the full report — was superior to the proposal of  Mueller’s staff that their own summaries be released. You can disagree  with Barr on that, but that’s not grounds for a perjury claim. And it  raises a point Barr made in his Senate testimony: The regulations do not  require 
any disclosure of the special counsel’s report (which  is supposed to be a confidential Justice Department document, as is  typical of Justice Department deliberations over whether to charge or  decline to charge). The decision of what, if anything, to disclose, and  how that should be done, is exclusively the attorney general’s, not the  special counsel’s. Mueller’s job was to make a prosecutorial judgment —  to charge or decline to charge obstruction. Mueller failed to do that.  Since Mueller didn’t do his own job, isn’t it a bit presumptuous of his  staff (through press leaks) to tell Barr how to do his?
Could  what happened here be more obvious? Mueller received fawning press for  two years on the expectation that he would slay Trump. Then, on March  24, Democrats and the media learned not only that there was no collusion  case (which was no surprise) but that Mueller had been derelict,  failing to render a judgment on the only question he was arguably needed  to resolve: Was there enough evidence to charge obstruction?  Journalists proceeded to turn on their erstwhile hero. This sent him  reeling, and it brought to full boil the anger of Mueller staffers, who  wanted to charge Trump with obstruction based on the creative (i.e.,  wayward) theory they had been pursuing — namely, that a president can be  indicted for obstruction based on the exercise of his constitutional  prerogatives if prosecutors (including prosecutors who are active  supporters of the president’s political opposition) decide he had  corrupt intent. The staffers put their pique in a letter that could be  leaked, and Mueller was sufficiently irked by the bad press that he  signed it. And now Democrats are using the letter as the launch-pad for  The Big Lie that Barr lied, calculating that if they say it enough  times, and their media collaborators uncritically broadcast these  declarations, no one will notice that they never actually refer to the  transcript of what they claim is the false testimony.
Democrats  are unnerved. Attorney General Barr is pursuing an inquiry into the  Obama administration’s decision to conduct a foreign counterintelligence  investigation of the Trump campaign. The time is now, they figure, to  reprise the Ken Starr treatment: the ad hominem withering of an  accomplished, highly capable official — in this instance, one who is  daring to press questions that would have been answered two years ago if  an incumbent Republican administration had spied on — er, monitored — a  Democratic presidential campaign.