Notice Anything Regarding All These Angry, Miserable White Liberal Women?
CNN's Top Legal Analyst Was Blunt About the Minnesota Dems' Outrageous Anti-ICE Lawsuit
Fox News' Greg Gutfeld Has an Exercise That Makes the 'Fake Empathy Liberal...Return...
About That Sonic Boom Weapon We Reportedly Deployed During Trump's Venezuela Raid...
Two Wisconsin Hospitals Halted 'Gender-Affirming Care' for Minors, but the Fight Isn't Ove...
Dilbert Creator Scott Adams Has Died at 68
Here's the Insane Reason a U.K. Asylum Seeker Was Spared Jail Despite Sex...
Trump to Iran: Help Is on the Way
Flashback: There Was a Time Democrats Were Okay With Separating Illegal Immigrant Families
Trump Administration Makes Another Big Move to Deport Somalis
ICE, ICE Baby?
The Left Is So Desperate to Defend Their Minneapolis Narrative, They’ve Hit a...
A Chicago Man Was Brutally Attacked in the Loop. Guess How Many Times...
Guess Who No-Showed for His House Deposition on Jeffrey Epstein
The December Inflation Report Is Here, and It's Good News
OPINION

DOJ Probe of S&P - Payback for Downgrade?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Something just doesn't seem right. It appears the Department of Justice has launched a probe of the nation's largest credit ratings firm, Standard & Poor's. As I told Martha MacCallum on Fox News, the timing of this development certainly raises a few questions.

Advertisement

Just two weeks ago, S&P expressed the ultimate concern about our economy by cutting the U.S. credit rating from a perfect AAA to AA+. First time that's happened in the nation's history. At the same time, two other ratings agencies, Fitch and Moody's, expressed concern as well about the country's economic problems, but did not issue a downgrade.

Now, there are detailed reports by news organizations that the Justice Department is probing S&P. The DOJ won't comment, of course. But the only credit ratings agency in the government's legal crosshairs right now appears to be S&P.

Why now? Why not in 2008? That's when the mortgage crisis really began and fueled what many believe created what we have today - an economic house-of-cards that is on the verge of collapse.

As a former tax attorney who once worked for the Treasury Department, I certainly understand the argument advanced by many that all of the ratings agencies should have been under scrutiny three years ago when this mortgage mess began to unfold.

Advertisement

Granted, we don't know what's taking place behind the scenes, and with the DOJ not talking, we're left with just appearances. But, I'm not sure I like what I see. The timing of all of this seems suspect to me.

Do we have a politically-motivated Department of Justice that's retaliating for S&P's decision to downgrade the U.S. credit rating? Or, do we have a responsible Justice Department that's just doing its job, maybe a little late, but acting without retribution?

Coincidence or payback? Stay tuned.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement