Carter Page, former Trump national security adviser. Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Alger Hiss is the martyred hero who inspired generations of progressives. A suave, articulate, Harvard-educated diplomat, Hiss was convicted in 1950 of perjury in a case related to his alleged espionage for the Soviet Union, and he remained a cherished symbol of the victims of McCarthyism. Decades later, testimonials to Hiss’s innocence have never stopped pouring forth.

The Republican Party appears to have been searching for an Alger Hiss of its own. It has settled on Carter Page. While neither suave nor articulate — indeed at times barely coherent — Page possesses the crucial virtue of having been the subject of a long-standing FBI counterintelligence investigation. This makes Page the best available symbol of the brutal investigatory excesses of the deep state.

The right-wing legal community has rallied around Page, from National Review’s Andrew McCarthy to party legal apparatchiks David Rivkin and Lee Casey in their Wall Street Journal op-ed perch. Page “is completely innocent. There is no evidence to suggest that anything that is claimed in the dossier is true,” asserts Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett.

It is true that Page has not yet been charged with any crimes, and it is possible he never will be. Still, he has done very little to reward the confidence conservatives have placed in him. Sean Hannity, one of Page’s most spirited defenders, recently asked him about the charges he has faced, “What factual inaccuracies stand out to you?” Page’s entire reply was, “It’s just the complete ridiculousness of it all, Sean, so …” and then he trailed off, forcing Hannity to come up with another question. Page then told Hannity, “You have been the Edward R. Murrow of this whole process,” seeming to epitomize the right’s sense that the investigation into Trump’s links with Russia is a modern form of McCarthyism.

Nor does Page’s background recommend him as a promising candidate for martyrdom. In 2013, he met with Russian spies, who (in comments later picked up by FBI surveillance) assessed him as greedy for oil money, but also possibly too much of an “idiot” to be as useful as they hoped. Page traveled to Russia frequently and conducted business with Russian energy firms tied to Vladimir Putin. In 2016, he somehow glommed onto the Trump campaign as an adviser — Trump named him, though the two reportedly never met. That summer, he visited Moscow and delivered a bizarrely pro-Russian speech, including such lines as, “Washington and other Western capitals have impeded potential progress through their often hypocritical focus on ideas such as democratization, inequality, corruption, and regime change.”

Between these episodes, the narrative has a lot of blanks. British investigator Christopher Steele compiled reports filling in those blanks with massively incriminating details. Page, wrote Steele, met in 2016 with two different Russian officials to discuss lifting of sanctions against Russia, bilateral energy cooperation and, most intriguingly, Russia’s interest in passing harmful information about Hillary Clinton to the Trump campaign. Page denies all these charges.

Republicans have used the dossier to try to discredit the Russia investigation writ large. This is what has made Page their cause célèbre. A widely hyped memo by Devin Nunes claimed the FBI had used the dossier as the primary basis to investigate Page, and failed to notify courts that its author was working for rival candidates. It turns out neither of these allegations is true. A Democratic memo shows that the FBI’s investigation of Page long predates the dossier, and it did disclose Steele’s political role.

In the wake of the destruction, little remains of the Republican argument except fulminations against the FBI for its unfair treatment of poor Carter Page. Yes, he met with Russian agents, went into business with state-controlled Russian entities, and publicly mouthed the Russian foreign policy line. But nothing else has been proven! “There is no evidence to suggest that anything that is claimed in the dossier is true,” insists Jarrett.

Well, the Democratic memo refers to a great deal of evidence the FBI had to open and then repeatedly renew its counterintelligence investigation. Most of that detail has been redacted, since it would compromise intelligence-gathering methods and sources. The Democratic memo asserts the FBI gathered a great deal of evidence to corroborate the picture drawn by Steele, but that evidence is broad patches of black:

What lies beneath that black ink? We don’t know. If I had to bet, I would wager it does not make Page look good. Page’s explanation is that there’s nothing shady, and that he is the victim of anti-Catholic discrimination by the Clinton campaign. “I am a lifelong practicing Roman Catholic who attended Catholic schools for 14 years, culminating with my Master of Arts in National Security Studies from Georgetown University in 1994,” Carter wrote last month. “The clear evidence of intolerance against Catholics shown by the ‘Hillary for America’ campaign and the fact that several of her closest advisors knew of my religion helps to make part of the reason for her attacks more obvious.” Therefore, according to Page, his treatment “may be among the most extreme examples of human rights violations observed during any election in US history since Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was similarly targeted for his anti-war views in the 1960s.”

My guess is that Steele’s account of Page’s behavior — which does not posit ﻿a conspiracy to persecute innocent Catholic foreign policy analysts, and places more weight on Page operating from simple greed — is closer to the mark. Republicans are betting the opposite.

One historical footnote worth considering is that Alger Hiss’s guilt as a Russian spy was eventually established beyond any reasonable doubt. Over the years, the ranks of his defenders dwindled to a hardened left-wing core. Maybe the future of Carter Page is to have a long career as a cartoonish right-wing, second-time-as-farce Alger Hiss.