Senate Republicans who vote to confirm Todd Blanche for
attorney general should take heed: They will be haunted for the rest of their
careers (some of which may very well end with the midterms) by the courageous
survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s monstrous crimes.
CNN
reported that last week 19 Epstein victims “responded to The New York
Times’s reporting that Blanche and other senior officials participated in
Situation Room meetings to discuss how to respond to growing pressure for more
transparency as the issue became a public relations crisis for the
administration.” The survivors’ statement read in part:
"We are deeply disturbed to learn that so many senior
members of the administration gathered in the Situation Room to discuss the
release of the Epstein files as a reputational problem, rather than an
opportunity to pursue investigative leads and try to figure out what actually
happened."
The reporting, they said, only confirmed their “worst
fears about the administration prioritizing political expediency over justice
for survivors and truth for the American people.” And they blasted Blanche, who
“has consistently minimized legitimate concerns about how the files have been
handled, including problematic redactions and the exposure of survivors’
personal information.” They concluded that he “failed to deliver transparency,
and he has gravely failed survivors.” (Their jab that promoting him to AG would
“failing upward, plain and simple” aptly describes the Trump DEI program for
elevating unqualified, ethically deficient white males to top posts.)
Even before Blanche’s nomination, Republicans were under
siege for their handling of the Epstein files. But Trump’s nomination of
Blanche amounts to a gratuitous slam at Epstein victims, puts the issue back in
the news, and forces Republicans (many past the primary season) to
decide: Save their own careers or promote Blanche?
The perpetually concerned but never courageous Sen. Susan
Collins (R-ME) is infamous for Trump-friendly votes when it matters (e.g.,
acquitting Donald Trump in the first impeachment trial; confirming obvious
opponents of Roe v. Wade for the Supreme Court; sending the big,
ugly bill to the floor when she could have stopped it in its tracks).
She has been at her most spineless in rubber-stamping unfit, unqualified, and
morally decrepit Cabinet members such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for Health and
Human Services secretary, Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence,
and Pam Bondi for attorney general. Would Collins now double down
and confirm yet another Trump stooge over the objections of Epstein survivors?
Surely, even she understands that a vote to confirm
Epstein victims’ nemesis could be a career-ender. If “character” is what
Republicans want to talk about in Maine, Democrats may be more than willing to
engage. (Indeed, Democratic
Senate nominee Graham Platner wasted no time last week making an issue
of Republicans’ support for the “Epstein class.”)
Collins’ biggest problem may be finding enough colleagues
willing to take the heat for voting to confirm Blanche so she can duck (i.e.
vote no without imperiling Blanche and incurring Trump’s and MAGA’s wrath).
Consider Sen. Jon Husted (R-Ohio), the governor- appointed replacement for
now-Vice President JD Vance. It would be wholly foolhardy for him to ignore the
Epstein abuse victims’ pleas.
Former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) already has put out ads against Husted pointing
to Husted’s receipt of six-figure donations from the infamous Ohio billionaire
and Republican donor Les Wexner, who hired Epstein as a financial adviser and
was named in an FBI email as “co-conspirator” in Epstein’s sex trafficking
crimes. (Husted has
tried to muddy the waters by fishing around for names in the files who wound up
giving to Brown, but, as fact
checkers have noted, “[n]one of the donors the Husted campaign
identified has been charged with a crime related to Epstein, nor has any been
identified as a co-conspirator.”)
Blanche puts Husted on the hot seat: Should he
support the Epstein
cover-up architect for attorney general when no reasonable voter would
believe Blanche is anything but a Trump stooge willing to perpetuate the
heinous coverup? Husted could well conclude a “yes” vote for Blanche
would doom his already-shaky campaign.
Likewise in Alaska, Blanche’s confirmation fight could
very well aggravate Republican Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan’s own problems with the
Epstein cover-up. Sullivan last September joined other Republicans (including
Husted and Collins) in blocking a vote (on defense authorization) aimed at
forcing release of the files.
As
a local Alaska journalist at the time noted, Sullivan blithely declared in
a constituent letter, “I trust [!?!] the Department of Justice
to carefully consider the release of relevant materials, while simultaneously
ensuring that Epstein’s victims remain protected and that legal protocols are
upheld.” As absurd as his faith in the Department of Justice was back then, a
vote now for the man who thwarted the law and obstructed the release of the
files would cement Sullivan’s image that he is Trump rubber stamp who would
throw victims under the bus to keep his job.
Finally, even though Texas
Sen. John Cornyn will not be on the ballot, Blanche’s confirmation
fight is already roiling the race of the man who defeated him, MAGA extremist
and scandal-plagued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. (Cornyn should consider
if he wants one of his last important votes in the Senate to be a tip of the
hat to Blanche and a kick in the teeth of Epstein’s victims.)
Houston’s
Chron. reported on the ongoing fallout from Paxton’s sweetheart plea
deal with Adam Hoffman, who was tried for first-degree sexual abuse of a child.
(Seriously, what is it with Republicans cutting deals with accused
pedophiles?) Democratic nominee James Talarico emailed the paper: “Adam
Hoffman—an admitted child molester—just became a registered sex offender in
Nebraska but still doesn’t have to register in Texas because Ken Paxton gave
him an Epstein-style sweetheart deal.” Talarico continued: “Hoffmann was
supposed to serve 25 years to life, but today he walks free after the most
corrupt politician in America put the well-being of pedophiles over the safety
of Texas children.”
Yikes. Talarico’s argument (“Does America really need
someone who authored his own ‘Epstein-style sweetheart deals‘roaming the halls
of Congress”) may hit home even in deep-red Texas. No wonder Republicans would
rather talk about veganism and transgender kids; perhaps supporting pedophiles’
victims is a better way to measure masculine virtue.
In short, by insisting on nominating Blanche — already under fire for masterminding the coverup, botching the files’ redaction, and conducting a nefarious interview with Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell — Trump has again handed Democrats a club to pommel Republicans who cannot resist Trump’s outrageous demands. If cowardly Senate Republicans vote to install Blanche to run DOJ, many voters may well conclude it is time to throw Republican senators out en masse. At some point, all Americans must decide whether to stand with the Epstein and his enablers or with his victims.
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