Since the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago, former President Donald Trump's Florida home, big media have been churning out stories about how the raid on Trump's turf has pushed some conservatives to abandon their support for law enforcement.
"GOP Trump supporters escalate dark rhetoric after FBI search," reads a PBS headline. "GOP Stirs Up Opposition to FBI as They Rally Behind Trump" reads another.
On Thursday, CNN anchor Alisyn Camerota took off on the odd Republican who mocked "defund the police" only to embrace going after FBI funding. "The FBI was just doing their job," she said.
This narrative rests on two premises.
1. There is no reason to question the FBI, despite its checkered history with Trump. (Pay no attention to the bogus Steele "dossier.")
2. When Republicans challenge law enforcement, they are hypocrites.
Let me start with the second point first.
Conservatives have had issues with federal prosecutorial overreach for decades. It's not a new thing.
Since President Bill Clinton signed the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act — with the fierce support of then-Sen. Joe Biden — activists on the left and right came to see that Washington's war on drugs led to draconian sentences for nonviolent drug offenders — especially if they didn't snitch.
The Texas Public Policy Foundation formed Right on Crime to champion conservative approaches to law enforcement in 2007.
The group's executive director, Brett Tolman, is a former U.S. attorney.
One of the things he learned on that job, he told me, is, "The FBI doesn't like to be told that they're wrong."
"They want more power, and they want more capability, and they are unapologetic about it, and they are one of the strongest lobbies in Washington, D.C.," Tolman offered.
Don't knock the FBI? Big shots in the line of command fell for the risible Steele "dossier," which led to a pricey and lengthy investigation into alleged collusion between Moscow and the Trump 2016 campaign. When the feds had to know they were wrong, they kept the probe going.
Back to the Mar-a-Lago searches.
As someone who used to authorize searches, Tolman said he has strong opinions on the matter. "I know this didn't have to go down the way it did," he said of how agents handled the search.
The facility wasn't wide open, noted Tolman. It was secured by the Secret Service. There's an election in two months, so the timing's a bad look.
The FBI never searched the home of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton after learning the wannabe president had used a personal email server to store and share classified information, Tolman added. Hunter Biden's laptop? No possible national security issue here.
This isn't "whataboutism," as DOJ boosters suggest. If Attorney General Merrick Garland wants the public to have faith in his Department of Justice, he should have delayed the search or presented information that bolsters the action.
Given the FBI's bad choices with Trump, I wouldn't assume there's no animus involved. But then, I wouldn't take Trump at his word either.
I've decided to wait for more information before weighing in on the Mar-a-Lago raid. But I agree with Tolman, who said, "They better have something really good to justify it."
Debra J. Saunders is a fellow with Discovery Institute's Chapman Center for Citizen Leadership. She has worked for more than 30 years covering politics on the ground and in Washington, D.C., as well as American culture, the news media, the criminal justice system and dubious trends in public schools and prestigious universities. As a White House correspondent and columnist for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Saunders followed then-President Donald Trump from Saudi Arabia to Singapore, covered campaign rallies and the advent of the White House Coronavirus Task Force and was an active questioner in the James S. Brady Briefing Room. She also covered the early weeks of the Biden administration. Read Debra J. Saunders' Reports — More Here.