John Kass

Chicago Tribune columnist

If success has a thousand fathers and failure has none, then who’s the daddy of the Fusion GPS story now rocking the Democratic Media Complex?

Lest you condemn me as a “science denier,” let’s stipulate there must be at least two parents, or maybe even three.

According to the Washington Post, the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee gave birth to the salacious “Trump Dossier,” compiled by the Washington-based research firm of Fusion GPS and a former British spy. The Clinton campaign and the DNC funded the operation.

And that dossier, now properly seen as opposition research, served as the launching pad for the federal investigations into Russia’s role in the 2016 elections. It also served as fuel for media snark around the Trump/Russia collusion story that has dominated political news since Clinton lost her election.

Some New York Times reporters are now saying they were lied to by lawyers for Fusion GPS for more than a year. The Democratic National Committee has run for cover.

And Republicans demand — what else? — more congressional investigations, as if we don’t have enough already.

President Donald Trump thumps his chest and claims vindication, while branding anything he doesn’t like to read as “fake news.”

And Hillary? “What happened,” Hillary?

Here’s hoping we’ll find out through the investigation of special counsel Robert Mueller, who, we hope, examines all angles thoroughly and reports it all out without partisanship.

Americans may find that this one has a third parent: Beltway journalists, who may have allowed themselves to be manipulated by a political intelligence operation in exchange for peer praise, the warmth of social media tribalism and clicks.

This hurts the many journalists putting partisanship aside to follow stories wherever they lead.

And it hurts the republic, which depends on credible, rigorous media oversight of the powerful, especially the imperial presidency.

I hope all this worries you, no matter what political tribe you belong to, because for more than a year now, that Democratic Media Complex has been shrieking about Russia this and Trump that and collusion this and collusion that.

The Trump-Russia collusion theme has been a chorus of barking dogs everywhere you turn, in online news hyped to feed anti-Trump appetites, on cable, where the appetites are sated, and even in happy-talk banter of radio and TV news anchors.

The driving force has been a partisan desire to excuse Hillary Clinton for losing her 2016 election to Trump. It’s been aggressive and passive and all Russia-Trump all the time.

Many, but not all, of the Russia stories have been debunked, and precious little, if any, evidence has come out of the congressional investigations directly linking the president to an alleged effort by the Russians to steal Clinton’s presidency.

Will Mueller pick his teeth with the bones of creepy former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort? That seems likely. And Tony Podesta — of the Democratic Chicago Podestas — has come under scrutiny too.

Many pro-Hillary pundits avoid the Fusion GPS explosion altogether, just as they’ve avoided examining the equally toxic Uranium One deal.

Uranium One is the mining company controlled by the Russians. More than $140 million was donated to the Clinton Foundation by Uranium One board members and associates. And Bill got a $500K chunk for related speaking fees in Moscow, because, well, he was such thrilling speaker when his wife was favored to win the White House.

What’s appalling is that the Obama administration quietly approved the deal handing 20 percent of American uranium reserves to the Clinton-friendly Russian mega-company, so that President Barack Obama could curry favor with Russia to win support for his Iran nuclear policy.

It’s all layered, like a Chicago Way real estate deal benefiting a favored politician, and when the thing is no longer hidden, we’re expected to fill our pipes full of Hopium and dream away.

Given the twists and turns of all things Trump, there will be a safe time when they can pile on. But isn’t that the work of pamphleteers?

Progressive journalist Glenn Greenwald, no fan of Donald Trump, is no pamphleteer.

Greenwald has debunked, chronicled and mocked many of the Russia-Trump stories that generated millions of clicks but didn’t stand up because they were untrue.

And before the Fusion GPS connection broke in the Washington Post, Greenwald was interviewed by Tucker Carlson on Trump/Russia and journalism.

“I think at best what you can say for (journalists) is they’re willingly and eagerly being manipulated,” Greenwald told Carlson on his Fox News program. “What you see over and over is that they publish really inflammatory stories that turn out to be totally false, and what happens in those cases? Nothing.

“They get enormous benefits when they publish recklessly,” Greenwald said. “They get applause on social media from their peers, they get zillions of retweets, huge amounts of traffic, they end up on TV, they get applauded across the spectrum because people are so giddy and eager to hear more about this Russia and Trump story. And when their stories get completely debunked, everybody agrees to ignore, and everybody moves on and they pay no price.”

So who’s the daddy?

It’s always about love, isn’t it? Love and clicks.

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.