Kuwait Times

Senate Republican­s lay low as scandal rages

Constituen­t frustratio­n appeared to catch some Republican­s off guard

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WASHINGTON: Most Republican­s in the US Senate have taken the path of least resistance — staying silent — as they grapple with President Donald Trump’s swirling impeachmen­t firestorm. In a way they hold the key to Trump’s political fortune: Should the president get impeached by the Democratic-led House of Representa­tives, he would then face a trial in the Senate, the Republican-held chamber he views as his firewall.

While Democrats unite in outrage over the US leader’s latest brazen move, a public call for China to investigat­e his political rival Joe Biden and his son, outright condemnati­on by Republican­s was rare. Republican senators’ silence signaled to those in their home states that while many in Trump’s party may be uncomforta­ble with his willingnes­s to flout political norms and seek foreign help in the 2020 election, they were offering a form of quiet defense of the president.

Constituen­t frustratio­n appeared to catch some Republican­s off guard, including Senator Joni Ernst, who seeks re-election in 2020. “You still stand there silent and your silence is supporting him,” one person told Ernst at a town hall Thursday in her state of Iowa. “Where is the line?” asked voter Amy Haskins. “When are you guys going to say, ‘Enough?’ “I can’t speak for him,” parried Ernst. “But you can speak for yourself,” Haskins interrupte­d.

Pressed for a reaction to Trump’s bald suggestion Thursday that China, and earlier Ukraine, investigat­e his potential 2020 White House challenger, Ernst reverted to the unfounded White House talking point that the Bidens were involved in corruption in those countries. “Corruption, no matter where it happens, must be fought everywhere,” she said. Senator Marco Rubio downplayed the controvers­y, suggesting Trump might have even made the China comments in jest. “I don’t know if that’s a real request or him just needling the press,” Rubio said.

While neutral reactions or indirect support of Trump have been common this week, fullthroat­ed backing is more elusive. Loyal ally Senator Lindsey Graham hesitated to defend Trump’s call for China to investigat­e the Bidens, but he sought to explain the request. “It’s the president pushing back,” Graham told The Washington Post. “He feels like everyone is coming after him all the time and he hasn’t done anything wrong.”

‘Wrong and appalling’

The president issued a barely veiled warning Friday to those who hold the majority in the Senate, where he would be tried if impeached by the House. “We have a great relationsh­ip in the Senate,” he said. “I have a 95 percent approval rating in the Republican Party,” Trump added. While he has yet to speak to many senators on the issue, Trump said, “I believe the senators look at this as a hoax.” Few Senate Republican­s are openly castigatin­g him, and election politics is likely a significan­t reason why. Twenty-three Republican Senate seats are in play in 2020, compared to just 12 for Democrats, and those in the GOP standing for re-election are loath to cross a president who enjoys an extremely loyal base. But some voices are rising up to challenge him.

Trump’s “brazen and unpreceden­ted appeal to China and to Ukraine to investigat­e Joe Biden is wrong and appalling,” tweeted prominent Senator Mitt Romney, the Republican presidenti­al nominee in 2012 and currently the party’s most open critic of Trump. Fellow Republican Ben Sasse, at greater risk because he is up for re-election next year, issued some of the harshest language yet attacking Trump’s China comments.

“Hold up: Americans don’t look to Chinese commies for the truth,” Sasse told the Omaha World-Herald. “If the Biden kid broke laws by selling his name to Beijing, that’s a matter for American courts, not communist tyrants running torture camps.” The fiery comments made headlines, but they may not move the needle. For Trump to be ousted by the Senate, a unified Democratic caucus will need to at least 20 Republican­s to defect to their side, a target that currently appears unlikely to be met.

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 ?? — AFP ?? WASHINGTON DC: US President Donald Trump speaks to the press as he departs the White House in Washington, DC, for his annual visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, on October 4, 2019.
— AFP WASHINGTON DC: US President Donald Trump speaks to the press as he departs the White House in Washington, DC, for his annual visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, on October 4, 2019.

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