BEFORE the Nunes memo was published, the White House’s biggest cheerleaders said it would be bigger than Watergate. The FBI argued against releasing it, citing “grave concerns” about its accuracy. The stage was set for an extraordinary fight between the president and his party on the one hand and the country’s premier law-enforcement agency on the other. When the long-awaited memo was declassified by the president and published, on February 2nd, mainstream opinion declared it a nothing-burger. So what is it? A giganotosaurus of a scandal, a significant act of institutional norm-busting or nothing really to worry about? Here is Democracy in America’s guide so you can make your own mind up.
First, a recap of the allegation in the memo, which was released by the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, chaired by Devin Nunes. At the end of October, only a few weeks before the presidential election, the Department of Justice (DoJ) and FBI received permission from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to perform...Continue reading
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