From the CBC:
“Former U.S.
Homeland Security chief of staff outs himself as 'Anonymous' who criticized
Trump”
A former Trump
administration official who penned a scathing anti-Trump op-ed and book under
the pen name "Anonymous" revealed himself Wednesday as a former chief
of staff at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The official, Miles
Taylor, said in a tweet six days before the Nov. 3 election that U.S. President
Donald Trump is "a man without character," and "it's time for
everyone to step out of the shadows." Taylor has been an outspoken critic
of Trump's in recent months and had repeatedly denied he was the author of the
column — even to colleagues at CNN, where he has a contributor contract. He
left the Trump administration in June 2019 and endorsed Democrat Joe Biden for
president this past summer.
Trump and White
House officials moved quickly to describe Taylor as someone with little
standing and clout. "This guy is a low-level lowlife that I don't know. I
have no idea who he is, other than I got to see him a little while ago on
television," Trump told a campaign rally crowd in Arizona. As he belittled
Taylor as a "sleazebag" and called for his prosecution, the crowd
broke into cheers of "drain that swamp." But as DHS chief of staff,
Taylor was in many White House meetings with the president on his border policy
and other major homeland security issues. During Taylor's time as chief of
staff, Trump threatened to shut down the southern border, and his
administration developed the policy to force asylum seekers to wait across the
U.S.-Mexico border. White House chief of staff Mark Meadows called Taylor's
revelation "a monumental embarrassment," tweeting, "I've seen
more exciting reveals in Scooby-Doo episodes."
During a CNN
appearance with Chris Cuomo on Wednesday night, Taylor said he didn't unmask
himself earlier because the story would have disappeared within 48 hours. "No
one would pay attention and they wouldn't care," he said. "Right now,
Americans are reviewing the president's resume, his record and his character
and it is mission critical that people like me, but others, come out now when
the voters are listening and tell them who this man really is." Taylor's
anonymous essay was published in 2018 by The New York Times, infuriating the
president and setting off a frantic White House leak investigation to try to
unmask the author. In the essay, the person, who at the time identified
themselves only as a senior administration official, said they were part of a
secret "resistance" force out to counter Trump's "misguided
impulses" and undermine parts of his agenda. "Many Trump appointees
have vowed to do what we can to preserve our democratic institutions, while
thwarting Mr. Trump's more misguided impulses until he is out of office,"
read the essay. The allegations incensed the president, bolstering his
allegations about a "deep state" operating within his government and
conspiring against him. And it set off a guessing game that seeped into the
White House, with current and former staffers trading calls and texts, trying
to figure out who could have written the piece. Trump's campaign press
secretary called Taylor's revelation Wednesday "the least impressive,
lamest political 'reveal' of all time." Hogan Gidley said in a statement
that Taylor "loved President Trump until he figured out he could try to
make money by attacking him."
Trump, who had
long complained about leaks in the White House, had ordered aides to unmask the
writer, citing "national security" concerns to justify a possible
Justice Department investigation. And he issued an extraordinary demand that
the newspaper reveal the author. Instead, the author pressed forward, penning a
follow-up book published last November, called A Warning, that continued to
paint a disturbing picture of the president, describing him as volatile,
incompetent and unfit to be commander-in-chief. To a certain extent, he's since
been overshadowed by other former government officials, both during impeachment
hearings and after, who went public condemning Trump's behaviour with their
names attached. Taylor's behaviour also leaves questions for CNN. He was asked
directly by the network's Anderson Cooper in August whether he was
"Anonymous" and answered: "I wear a mask for two things,
Anderson: Halloween and pandemics. So, no." Josh Campbell, a national
security correspondent for CNN, tweeted that he had also asked Taylor if he was
"Anonymous" and was told no.
Taylor said
Wednesday that he owed Cooper a beer and a mea culpa. He said he wrote in his
book that he would deny being "Anonymous" if asked, because he wanted
to keep the focus on his arguments, instead of who was writing them. "You
know what the problem is with having lied is: Now you're a liar, and people
will be slow to believe you," Cuomo said. But he continued with a
half-hour interview where Taylor denounced Trump. CNN said Taylor would remain
a network contributor. Taylor said he believed Trump would double down on
damaging policies, particularly the separation of families at the southern
border, if he won a second term. "They want to turn this country into
Fortress America rather than a shining city on the hill," he said. He said
he considered resigning from the Trump administration a year before he did and
wishes now that he had. Former Republican Party consultant Reed Galen, one of
the founders of the anti-Trump group the Lincoln Project, tweeted that Taylor
"isn't a hero." He added: "He sat in those rooms, in those
councils of power and allowed the banality of evil to work.... Heroism isn't
silence until it's convenient and personally advantageous to stand up."
^ I don’t
believe that anyone who publishes an Op-Ed or claims to be a Whistleblower
should be allowed to be Anonymous and if they do then I hold little stock in
what they say. I believe Whistleblowers should be protected after their
complaint, but that their name should be made public when their statement or
report is made public otherwise it is just some unknown troll complaining and
could be anyone including foreign trolls. As for Taylor, I don’t hold him in
much esteem since he openly lied on record when directly asked if he was Anonymous.
Whatever he says now is tainted. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/anonymous-identity-revealed-miles-taylor-1.5780612
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