“Glad to be back on Twitter after more than two months. For the backstory, stay tuned,” the verified account with over 770,000 followers tweeted on Friday, for the first time since Bolton’s resignation – or firing, depending on who you ask – on September 10.
Another tweet declared that he has “liberated” his personal Twitter account, “suppressed unfairly in the aftermath of my resignation.”
Unsurprisingly, among the 20,000-plus responses were heartfelt pleas from online Resistance luminaries for Bolton to “do the right thing” and testify before the House Intelligence Committee in the impeachment inquiry of Trump – just like some of his NSC underlings.
“If [Bolton] loves this country, he has to tell the truth in impeachment hearings. Fiona Hill did it yesterday. He can too!” declared podcaster and activist Amy Siskind.
“We need you to speak up and quickly. Heroes are in short supply and attacked quickly by Trumpist partisans who think that the public is too stupid to know what has happened,” tweeted Yale professor Howard Forman.
“No games Mr Bolton. Do what’s right. That’s all,” said ex-congressman Joe Walsh, a Trump critic hoping to primary the president in 2020.
There were plenty of skeptics among the Resistance, however – such as President Bill Clinton’s former spokesman turned podcaster Joe Lockhart and Lawfare’s Susan Hennessey, who suspected Bolton was trying to market his book rather than help Congress impeach his former boss.
“Patriots testify. Grifters don’t,” Lockhart declared.
Bolton’s two follow-up tweets made no suggestion he might testify, however. Though he speculated the tweeting ban might have been “out of fear of what I may say,” as of 3 pm on Friday he hasn’t followed that up by saying anything one way or the other.
It is no secret that Bolton left the White House not on the best terms with the president, fueling hopes among Trump’s critics that the disgruntled hawk might seek to get back at Trump by spilling all the NSC secrets to House Democrats.
The only trouble with that scenario is that the hearings have ended for the foreseeable future, with the House on Thanksgiving recess through December 3. Trump has already declared he would just love to have a trial in the Senate – where, unlike the House, Republicans have the majority and can set the rules.
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Eventually, Bolton did say that the White House "never returned access" to his account, effectively holding it hostage, and praised Twitter for "standing by their community standards" and taking a hand in its restoration.
Whether that gets characterized as Trump's newest impeachable offense, it remains to be seen.
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