Some conservatives have raised questions about the impartiality of the newly appointed special council on former President Donald Trump’s case, Jack Smith, after it emerged that his wife donated to President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign and produced a film for former First Lady Michelle Obama.
On Nov. 18 Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Smith to be special counsel in two probes involving Trump.
Smith will take over the investigation in two federal criminal probes, one related to Trump’s handling of presidential records and classified documents, and the other pertaining to his alleged interference in the transfer of power on Jan. 6, 2021.
Katy Chevigny, Jack Smith’s wife, was a producer on the 2020 documentary “Becoming,” which features the 2019 tour promoting Michelle Obama’s book of the same name.
Suspicion of 2-Tiered System
The revelations have sparked suspicion from some Republicans.Gaetz: ‘Defund’ Special Counsel’s Office
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) raised concerns about the potential bias of Smith’s investigation given his wife’s prominent ties to the Democrats.The congressman went a step further by suggesting putting in place a law to settle such conflicts of political interests in the future.
“One has to wonder if we shouldn’t address this legislatively so that in the future—whether it’s Republicans or Democrats being investigated—you don’t have the very people in the throes of the political conflict trying to migrate their political grievance into the criminal justice process,” he contended.
In Gaetz’s opinion, the solution in the case of Smith is to defund the special counsel’s office.
“It’s not what we should be seeing in the United States of America,” he said. “I don’t want to sit around hand-wringing and bedwetting over this. I think we ought to use the power of the purse to defund this explicitly political exercise against President Trump.”
Trump has called the DOJ’s move a “horrendous abuse of power,” a “hoax,” and part of a string of politically motivated “witch hunts.”