We live in a country of laws and no one should be above them. That includes the president. And it also includes Hillary Clinton, his former campaign opponent. Where there is reason to believe that laws have been violated, there should be an investigation and if necessary a prosecution.

But the calls by some Republicans for a special counsel to investigate Clinton smack of something other than a desire for evenhanded enforcement of the law. Rather, they are part of a desperate effort by the president, his allies in Congress and the right-wing media to take the focus off the tangled investigations into the Trump campaignโ€™s conduct, and particularly into any possible collusion with Russia.

Earlier this month Trump tweeted: โ€œEverybody is asking why the Justice Department (and FBI) isnโ€™t looking into all of the dishonesty going on with Crooked Hillary & the Dems.โ€ Meanwhile, Republican members of Congress have offered up a grab bag of incidents and insinuations they claim justify the appointment of a special counsel.

This dubious bill of particulars includes Clintonโ€™s (minimal) role as secretary of state in the approval of the purchase by a Russian company of a controlling stake in Uranium One, a uranium company whose major investor had contributed to the Clinton Foundation; the investigation of Clintonโ€™s use of a private email server (yes, theyโ€™re still on about that); and the Democratsโ€™ funding of the so-called dossier about Trump and Russia.

On Tuesday, Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions told the House Judiciary Committee that any decision to name another special counsel would be guided by law, not politics. But his comments were only partly reassuring.

To his credit, Sessions told the committee that any decision about another special counsel would be based on Justice Department regulations and โ€œthe facts.โ€ After Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, suggested that it โ€œlooks likeโ€ a special counsel is justified, Sessions replied: โ€œI would say โ€˜looks likeโ€™ is not enough basis to appoint a special counsel.โ€

But Sessions sent a mixed message on an equally important question: whether he would be involved in the decision about whether to appoint a special counsel and, if so, who it should be. Clearly he shouldnโ€™t be.

At his confirmation hearings, Sessions promised the Senate that, because of his role in the Trump campaign, he would recuse himself from matters related to Clinton or the Clinton Foundation. But on Tuesday he testified that โ€œI have directed senior federal prosecutorsโ€ to determine if allegations related to Clinton justify further action by the department.

Moreover, Sessions declined to say whether he would recuse himself from cases that might arise from further investigation.

Sessions needs to promise to recuse himself from the issues Republicans are citing in agitating for a special counsel (including the original investigation of Clintonโ€™s emails) as well as the decision about whether to appoint such an official.

From the beginning, Trumpโ€™s โ€œlock her upโ€ attitude toward Clinton has been cynical and irresponsible, reminiscent of the way leaders in authoritarian societies treat their political opponents. The Justice Department must not act in a way that suggests it is doing his bidding.

Los Angeles Times