Arts & Entertainment, Last Word

Thoughts Revisited: A Higher Loyalty

By Miriam R. Kramer

This column from May 2018 reveals the accurate warning signs former FBI Director James Comey saw in his dealings with President Trump during his first administration. Comey was indicted last month on charges of making false statements to Congress, the result of President Trump’s pressure to punish him for his refusal to play by Trump’s rules.

Comey’s lawyers argued that President Trump had been pressuring the Justice Department for years to exact retribution again him, going against all legal and presidential norms while violating Comey’s right to freedom of speech. He pleaded not guilty in October 2025 to one count of false statements and one count of obstruction of a congressional proceeding in relation to his 2020 testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Perhaps in light of today’s surreal atmosphere of eroding democracy, the column below seems quaint in Comey’s wish to live up to his ideals. I hope it is not. I hope that as the president’s urge to smash constitutional rights continues, a good portion of the American public will stand up for those norms and rights that belong to the democracy we live in, and unify in seeking to retain them. [Article below edited for length.]

In his fascinating memoir and treatise on leadership, A Higher Loyalty, former FBI Director James Comey discusses his trajectory in government service up until he unwillingly became a political lightning rod during and after the most bitterly contested and partisan presidential election in modern American politics.

Comey became one of the best-known names in America before the 2016 elections, when he announced in late October that the FBI was re-opening an investigation into Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server for classified documents. Incurring the wrath of Democrats for potentially swinging the election towards President Donald Trump, Comey then appeared before Congress in June 2017 after Trump sacked him to repudiate Trump’s leadership and call many of his statements false.

He testified that the President lied in saying that he was fired because of low morale at the FBI. Comey responded that Trump most likely fired him because he refused to profess his loyalty to Trump and influence the way the FBI was investigating Trump campaign officials’ potential collusion with Russia. Comey also states that he hoped his testimony would help lead to an independent prosecutor who could investigate those possible ties. He understood that it would be extraordinarily difficult for the current Department of Justice to conduct a nonpartisan investigation under the warping influence of any leaders President Trump endeavored to make loyal only to himself.

Comey effectively makes the case that he had terrible options in deciding whether to inform the public that the FBI was investigating Clinton’s e-mails, particularly when a separate investigation of former Representative Anthony Weiner uncovered a cache of hundreds of thousands of e-mails. He believes that he had two choices: to reveal that the FBI was investigating the e-mails as a matter of public interest and inadvertently sway the election towards Trump; or potentially delegitimize Clinton’s possible presidency while leaving the FBI open to the accusation that it had taken her side.

As an ardent institutionalist, Comey professes that his chief aim was to pick the best of the worst and preserve the FBI’s non-partisan “reservoir of public trust and credibility.”

Comey trusts that inspirational leaders have the confidence to show vulnerability by asking questions, thus displaying emotional intelligence. By extension, he believes that they seek truth from multiple angles before making decisions, however hard those truths may be to realize and absorb. The points he makes may seem self-evident, but obviously they are not.

When describing his dealings with President Trump after the election, Comey judges him ethically challenged, untruthful, and unable to hear advice from any viewpoint other than his own. He also notes the President’s multiple factual lies and verbal contradictions within the space of the monologues he heard while meeting him one on one. As a writer Comey carefully points out details, slowly builds his case, and repeatedly restates his ideas to hammer them home.

Comey fiercely declares that he has endeavored to achieve an ideal of the FBI antithetical to that of former Director J. Edgar Hoover, who meddled illegally in politics and played kingmaker under eight presidents. In helping to re-create the FBI’s mission statement to match his employees’ purpose, Comey put into place his goals for the FBI to “protect the American people and uphold the Constitution of the United States” with no regard to party loyalties. He proclaims here that the FBI must hold to the higher purpose of protecting and enriching the United States and its citizens while hewing only to the truths to be found in the intelligence it gathers, rather than their political implications.

After a concentrated period thinking about the author’s arguments, the reader may have to take a break from Comey’s intense Boy Scout barrage of principles, standards, and morals. They can feel overwhelming. He can also appear self-righteous and sanctimonious at times. Yet he seems very credible, and as a reader, I exit this work inspired. His earnestness, probity and good intentions ring true. What he has to offer is what many of us desperately need right now: optimism and inspiration that ordinary citizens engaged with positively shaping their world will proclaim their truths in the face of top-down and social-media-promoted lies, thus upholding more positive values and inclusive voices.

In the end, my favorite part of Comey’s book is his chapter on “The Washington Listen” and how it relates to leadership. Many of us involved in the Washington, DC political arena have sat through mind-numbing conferences, luncheon meetings, and board meetings in which everyone speaks at each other with little real communication. While tuning out exists everywhere, I noticed “The Washington Listen” immediately when I began work in DC after college.

Comey describes listening in DC as a period of static silence in which someone else speaks before you say what you were planning to say all along. Real listening is also, as he sees it, more than sitting as someone talks and simply hearing what they say. “You signal to someone, ‘I want what you have, I need to know what you know, and I want you to keep telling me the things you’re telling me’…Two good friends [listen] to each other in a way where each is both pushing information to the other and pulling information out of the other.”

As I think about A Higher Loyalty, real listening jumps out at me as one of the foremost ways to break down partisanship. We need to find ways to encourage it and heal the ruptures that currently prevent us from operating effectively as a country. One of my favorite quotations from Carl Jung comes to mind: “The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.” If we take this imperative to not only argue but to also listen to one another from the grassroots up, our American ideal of E pluribus unum would become not just an ever-shining ideal, but also a real-world twenty-first-century possibility.

About the Author: Miriam Kramer worked at Olsson’s Books & Records before it closed in 2008. As a global nomad, she has lived, studied, or worked in diverse countries overseas. With her experience writing and studying international affairs, she has promoted democracy, international media, the arts, peace building, and citizen diplomacy during her career.

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