Tag Archives: Jim Jordan

GOP response to facts damning to Trump: denial, diversion, accusations & embrace of victimhood

When the facts are damning, do anything you can to detract attention from those facts. Three experienced Republican leaders — House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Freedom Caucus-founder Jim Jordan, and Senator Lindsey Graham, always ready to flatter the President with contortions and contrivances — demonstrate how to avoid offering a simple, straightforward answer to an inconvenient question.

Watching the videos (linked to the tweets) is a lesson in subterfuge as practiced by a Republican Party too fearful of the President to acknowledge wrongdoing. Observe Congress’s most vocal defenders of Trump in action on mainstream television:

1. Leader McCarthy listens to Scott Pelley read one of the most talked about exchanges from the memo on Trump’s phone call to President Zelensky.

McCarthy responds: “Well, you just added another word.” Pelley assures him that the word “is in the White House transcript.”

McCarthy pivots and begins a reply, “When I read the transcript …,” by repeating talking points that Republicans distributed last week to Members of Congress. While McCarthy denies having seen those talking points, it’s obvious from his comment about the “added” word that he hasn’t read the transcript — or hasn’t retained what he read. (Not ready for prime time.)

2. Jake Tapper interviews Congressman Jim Jordan, one of the most aggressive practitioners of deflection and whataboutism in the House.

Tapper: I understand you want to change the subject, but the President was pushing the president of Ukraine to investigate a political rival. I cannot believe that that is okay with you. I can’t believe it’s okay with you.

Jordan: It’s not okay because — but he didn’t do that.

Tapper: … It’s in the transcript. We all read it.

Jordan: I read the transcript.

But of course, if he has, he doesn’t want to talk about it. Instead, he throws out accusations against the Bidens, whines about Trump’s victimhood at the hands of the FBI, but — talking fast and loud — won’t acknowledge the simple facts related straightforwardly in the White House transcript. (Finally Tapper has had enough and concludes the interview.)

3. And, last but not least, the Senator from South Carolina: Among the highlights of the interview with Margaret Brennan, is Graham’s complaint about hearsay (“a second hand account,” as the GOP talking point puts it).

Bennan points out that the whistleblower’s account has been confirmed by the White House transcript of the call. The facts don’t matter to Graham. He invokes hearsay multiple times, makes the false claim that “they changed the rules” about hearsay and whistleblowers, and — like Jordan — offers a long diatribe about Trump being persecuted. (And nary a glance at the facts that have been confirmed already.)

(Image: Steely Dan’s Pretzel Logic album cover.)

Michael Cohen elicits Rashômon-effect on House Oversight Committee

“You said all these bad things about the president during that last thirty minutes, and yet you worked for him for ten years?

All those bad things, I mean – if it’s that bad, I can see you working for him for ten days, maybe ten weeks, maybe even ten months, but you worked with him for ten years.” (C-Span video beginning at 1:08:03)

So said Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH)—Ranking Member of the House Oversight Committee and founding member of the House Freedom Caucus—expressing concern with Michael Cohen’s truthfulness this morning. Meanwhile, Jordan continues to work furiously on behalf of President Trump—a crusade that has certainly extended beyond ten days, ten weeks, or ten months. Of course Jordan has asserted, in response to persistent questioning, that he is unaware of Donald Trump telling even a single lie.

On the other hand, what are we to make of this, from Representative Carolyn Maloney (D-NY)?

 “Thank you very much for your testimony and, Mr. Chairman, this is a story of redemption.” (1:26:54)

Let’s hope that more skeptical Democrats, who wish to restore credible Congressional oversight of the Executive Branch, are searching for corroborating evidence for anything Mr. Cohen has to say.