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Hunter Biden Has Some Explaining to Do

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sheridan

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Mar 2, 2023, 1:31:34 AM3/2/23
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Name a recurring Fox News segment, and there is a Republican congressional
investigation for it: the origin of the coronavirus, the threat to our
capital markets, supposed collaboration between social media companies and
the Democratic Party. Some representatives have launched an investigation
into whether the Department of Justice targeted parents who protested
vaccine and mask mandates at school board meetings. No bit of pique is too
tangential to escape their notice; Lauren Boebert recently demanded during
one of these investigations that former Twitter representatives answer for
her perceived shortage of likes: “Did either of you approve the shadow
banning of my account @LaurenBoebert? Yes or no?”

Nothing feeds the perpetual outrage machine like a sprawling investigation
into a vague but titillating scandal. And no pursuit is more vague and
more titillating than the so-far-fruitless obsession with Hunter Biden.

For two years now, conservatives have accused President Biden’s wayward
son of influence peddling, money laundering, bribery and illegal foreign
lobbying — and they have sought to turn his misadventures into a tawdry,
sprawling hydra powerful enough to entangle and distract the whole
administration. With control over House investigations, they may finally
get what they want: a chance to turn Hunter Biden’s life inside out.

It may counter every instinct a loving parent (or a political consultant)
could ever have, but the president should want a version of that, too.
During Hunter Biden’s active addiction, Joe Biden made it clear to his son
and the world that his paternal love was not contingent on his son’s
behavior. Now is the time to make it clear that his behavior does have
consequences. Joe Biden should clearly call for his son to cooperate — not
with the Republican circus on the Hill but with the Justice Department.
That would let Hunter Biden stand on his own and allow the administration
to focus on issues that matter most to the American people.

Up until this point, the Biden family has — publicly, at least — brushed
off Republican threats: “Lots of luck!” Joe Biden told them last fall.
Jill Biden simply asserts that “Hunter is innocent.”

But even the most optimistic Democrats know Hunter Biden has some
explaining to do. The Justice Department has been investigating him since
2018. Last fall, The Washington Post quoted sources close to the inquiry
saying the department had enough evidence to charge him with criminal
violations regarding tax crimes and lying on a federal form.

Of course, cheating on your taxes and lying on a form are nothing compared
with the operatic tale of corruption at the highest levels spun out by
Tucker Carlson et al. But the president’s Hunter Biden problem goes beyond
the strict letter of the law. All Republicans want to do is conjure the
clingy atmosphere of deviousness that Hillary Clinton never escaped.

Last month, Hunter Biden introduced a daring tactic in his defense: His
legal team requested that the Delaware attorney general, the Justice
Department and the I.R.S. investigate the key figures responsible for
perpetuating the laptop story and disseminating his personal information
without his permission.

As wild as the accusations against him are, the one nugget of irreducible
truth is Hunter Biden’s privilege. It has served him as a just-about-
literal get-out-of-jail-free pass. The same is true for countless other
politicians’ kids — certainly including Donald Trump’s. But pointing out
the double standard won’t be enough to defang Republican criticism. And
neither will just waiting for it all to blow over.

Democrats have tried ignoring Republican fishing expeditions before,
hoping that the accusations would evaporate or that voters wouldn’t really
care. Sometimes that works. (R.I.P., Operation Fast and Furious.) But with
enough prolonged effort, they really can do damage. They succeeded in
tarnishing the Clinton brand forever.

Whatever Hunter Biden did or didn’t do, if his father endorses the Justice
Department investigation — and promises to stay out of it entirely — that
would elevate law enforcement’s slow and steady conventional machinery
over the thirsty ravings of far-right Congress members. (As a bonus, the
Justice Department will be far less likely than Congress to delve into the
most salacious elements of this story.)

And then there’s the fact that Joe Biden built a national profile as an
eager participant in the war on drugs, which sent hundreds of thousands of
people — primarily Black men — to prison. His son wound up a working
artist in Malibu, Calif. Joe Biden’s honesty about that could dampen the
nefarious background noise of “rules for thee but not for me” that
followed the Clintons wherever they went. His reputation as an essentially
honest politician (and a kind, loving father) is the mortar that has glued
his career together; not admitting that his family has benefited from his
position in this one case gives every other accusation a toehold.

Hunter Biden has endured considerable scrutiny, but he has advantages that
most people don’t: No matter what happens, he is unlikely to find himself
destitute or without opportunities. Even more of a privilege, perhaps, is
that his family has such clear, unconditional love for him. As a person in
recovery, I’ve been moved every time Joe Biden has come to his son’s
defense. I know that his testimony to Hunter Biden’s value as a person has
helped destigmatize the disease of addiction on a significant scale.

Being willing to fight for his son against all comers has been one way for
Joe Biden to show love. Letting his son stand on his own two feet and
loving him all the same is another.

Ana Marie Cox was the founding editor of the political blog Wonkette. She
is the author of “Dog Days,” a novel. She is working on a memoir. She is
also in recovery.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor.
We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here
are some tips. And here’s our email: let...@nytimes.com.

<https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/28/opinion/joe-biden-hunter.html>
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