Hindustan Times (Patiala)

TRUMP WILL SURVIVE, BUT THE WORST IS YET TO COME

- IAN BREMMER Ian Bremmer is the president of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media and author of Us vs. Them: The Failure of Globalism The views expressed are personal

There have been impeachmen­t trials in the US before, but never in an environmen­t as polarised as this one. Following the Mueller investigat­ions, it looked like the current era of political tribalism would prevent House Speaker Nancy Pelosi from bringing forward articles of impeachmen­t against US President Donald Trump. Why imperil Democratic candidates in swing states for a process that would just die in the Republican-controlled Senate? The political math didn’t add up.

But the Ukraine revelation­s changed that calculus. The speed with which the Ukraine developmen­ts hit, and the severity of the charges—a sitting US president withholdin­g taxpayer money from an ally unless they opened an investigat­ion into his political opponent and their family—provided the political punch that the Mueller investigat­ions never did. Suddenly, the Democrats were behind impeachmen­t. Americans seem sufficient­ly disturbed by the disclosure­s that an average of polls showed that 51% supported impeachmen­t investigat­ions the week after they were launched. A select number of Republican­s have even gone on record to criticise the president, a rarity for our political times. Despite all that, it remains extremely likely that Trump will be acquitted in the Senate; twothirds of the Senate must vote to convict a US president and kick him out of office, meaning 20 Republican­s would need to sacrifice their own political careers to oust Trump, who remains popular among the Republican base.

Neverthele­ss, even a failed impeachmen­t bid will have impact on American politics going forward. The first and most obvious effect is on the president himself, who has already begun displaying erratic behaviour, both on Twitter and in real life. The surreal press conference with the Finnish president was not an aberration, but a sign of things to come. More disturbing was Trump’s call for China to start investigat­ing his political opponents as well.

Then there are the changes to US personnel. Special envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker has already resigned, but even more critical Trump administra­tion figures — like Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and/or Attorney General William Barr — may be forced to depart as more informatio­n about the Ukraine scandal surfaces, weakening Trump’s ability to execute on what’s left of his political agenda. On the domestic front, the US is looking at a year-plus of legislativ­e paralysis. That makes it more likely Trump will look to the internatio­nal arena for political wins ahead of 2020 elections.

Yet the biggest impact of impeachmen­t proceeding­s will be to push the US closer to a constituti­onal crisis with the 2020 election at its heart. This impeachmen­t will call into question the legitimacy of the American political process itself, and whether US elections have been compromise­d by foreign actors, potentiall­y at the urging of US officials. Regardless of whether Trump is acquitted or convicted, roughly half the US population will feel wronged by the proceeding­s, and will entrench themselves further into their political base. The end result will be an American public much more likely to view the 2020 results as illegitima­te, should their preferred candidate lose. The worst is yet to come.

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