President Donald Trump is blasting the media for not reporting the name of a person who has been identified in conservative circles as the whistleblower who spurred the impeachment inquiry. Yet Mr Trump has carefully avoided using the name himself.
Exposing whistleblowers can be dicey, even for a president. For one thing, it could be a violation of federal law to identify the whistleblower. While there's little chance Mr Trump could face charges, revealing the name could give Democrats more impeachment fodder. It could also prompt a backlash among some Senate Republicans who have long defended whistleblowers.
The entire media is #Triggered that I (a private citizen) tweeted out a story naming the alleged whistleblower. Are they going to pretend that his name hasn’t been in the public domain for weeks now? Numerous people & news outlets including Real Clear Politics already ID’d him. https://t.co/bcamyTaXP3
And, despite wanting the name to be disclosed, Mr Trump sees some benefits to keeping it secret. The anonymity makes it easier for Mr Trump to undermine the credibility of the person behind the complaint as well as the complaint itself, according to three officials and Republicans close to the White House not authorised to publicly discuss private conversations. It also allows him to bash the media for supposedly protecting the whistleblower.
In recent weeks, a name has circulated in conservative media of a man said to be the whistleblower. The president's son, Donald Trump Jr., on Wednesday tweeted a link to a story on the Breitbart website that used the name. He also included the name in his tweet.
"Everyone knows who he is. CNN knows. The Washington Post knows. The New York Times knows. Congress knows. The White House knows. Even the president knows who he is," former CIA analyst Fred Fleitz told the RealClearInvestigations website, which last week identified the whistleblower. "They're hiding him," he added. "They're hiding him because of his political bias."
RealClearInvestigations journalist Paul Sperry wrote that the man's identity was an "open secret", having been bandied about in Washington and online for weeks, and the website was "disclosing the name because of the public's interest in learning details of an effort to remove a sitting president from office".
US whistleblower laws exist to protect the identity and careers of people who bring forward accusations of wrongdoing by government officials. Lawmakers in both parties have historically backed those protections. The Associated Press typically does not reveal the identity of whistleblowers.
The identity of the whistleblower is almost a moot point — much of the unnamed person's August complaint about Trump's July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has been corroborated and expanded upon by officials' on-the-record, congressional testimony and the reconstructed, partial transcript of the call released by the White House.
In a statement shortly after Trump Jr.'s tweet, the whistleblower's attorneys warned that "identifying any suspected name for the whistleblower will place that individual and their family at risk of serious harm".
The statement by Andrew P. Bakaj and Mark S. Zaid said, "Publication or promotion of a name shows the desperation to deflect from the substance of the whistleblower complaint. It will not relieve the President of the need to address the substantive allegations, all of which have been substantially proven to be true."
It came as Fox News reported on social media posts by Mr Zaid from 2017 that a "coup has started" and that "impeachment will follow ultimately". In one post, Mr Zaid remarked, "I predict @CNN will play a key role in @realDonaldTrump not finishing out his full term as president."
"The whistleblower's lawyer gave away the game," Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh told Fox News. "It was always the Democrats' plan to stage a coup and impeach President Trump and all they ever needed was the right scheme. They whiffed on Mueller so now they've settled on the perfectly fine Ukraine phone call. This proves this was orchestrated from the beginning."
A number of Trump allies have counselled the president not to unveil the whistleblower's identity. So in recent days Mr Trump has shifted to a new tactic, denouncing the media for allegedly protecting the whistleblower by refusing to identify the person, allowing him to charge that the media is in cahoots with Democrats and the "deep state" — Trump opponents in the government.
The strategy is reminiscent of the one Mr Trump used during special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe, during which he derided the so-called deep state investigators for allegedly plotting to bring down a duly elected president. Mr Trump, on Twitter and while talking to reporters, relentlessly painted then-FBI director James Comey, agent Peter Strzok and FBI lawyer Lisa Page as corrupt and conspiratorial.
Though there's no solid evidence that the Russia probe suffered from any improper bias at its origin, Ms Page and Mr Strzok, in a series of text messages, revealed their dislike of Mr Trump, which the president pointed to as proof of a plot against him.
With help from some allies, including Senator Rand Paul at a Kentucky rally on Monday, Mr Trump has moved to create a similar dynamic with the whistleblower. Without providing evidence, Mr Trump has painted the whistleblower as a liberal "Never Trumper" and held up the person's anonymity — essential for protection — as some sort of nefarious proof of a conspiracy with Democrats.
Much like his scattershot efforts to muddle the narrative of the Mueller probe, often by questioning the integrity and process of the investigation itself rather than the facts, Mr Trump has been looking to plant the seed of doubt about the Ukraine matter with both his base and the GOP senators who could decide his fate in an impeachment trial, according to the officials and Republicans.
But if he identified the supposed whistleblower, Mr Trump could risk antagonising some of those same senators, who believe whistleblowers are important for rooting out corruption. Advocates for whistleblowers warn that stripping anonymity from the person who made the Ukraine complaint would make people across the government more reluctant to speak up about wrongdoing.
In the context of an investigation, someone who names or retaliates against a whistleblower could be prosecuted for obstructing an investigation or harassing a witness, said Tom Devine, legal director for the Government Accountability Project.
But whistleblowers in the intelligence community, like the one who reported the Ukraine call, lack many of the protections provided to their counterparts elsewhere in the government. "There are some rights on paper, but in reality they are extremely weak," Mr Devine said.
In other parts of the government, whistleblowers can take claims they have been retaliated against to independent administrative agencies and, potentially, federal courts. In the intelligence agencies, complaints are handled internally. "The way you do that is by going back to the agency that retaliated against you to ask them to change their minds," Mr Devine said. There is a right of appeal to the inspector general, whose work can be reviewed a panel of auditors he appoints, he said.
Stephen Kohn, the chairman of the board of the National Whistleblower Center, said it's troubling that prospects for protecting the whistleblower really depend on Mr Trump.
"The only guarantee here is to hope the president does his job" and prevents retaliation against him in the first place, Mr Kohn said.