The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Republican­s see ‘battle for soul of party’

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WASHINGTON: A day after the Senate acquitted Donald Trump in a historic second impeachmen­t trial, America was weighing how long a shadow the former president will cast – over his party, and over the country.

The Senate on Saturday voted 57-43 to convict Trump of inciting the January 6 assault on the US Capitol.

It was a stinging rebuke, with seven Republican­s joining all Democrats in the most bipartisan impeachmen­t vote ever, but it fell far short of the 67 votes needed for conviction.

With Trump hinting afterward at a possible political future, even as other Republican­s said it was time to move on, the stark divide facing the party was on full view.

One frequent Trump critic, Republican Governor Larry Hogan of Maryland, on Sunday predicted a ‘real battle for the soul of the Republican Party.’

“This is not over,” he told CNN, adding he would have voted to convict Trump.

Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana was one of the seven Republican­s to vote to convict; he predicted Sunday that Trump’s still-strong hold on Republican­s would fade.

“I think his force wanes... I think our leadership will be different going forward,” he told ABC’s ‘This Week.’

Several Republican­s, even while voting to acquit Trump, expressed dismay over his role on Jan 6 and in the weeks before, as he stoked anger with false claims the November election was stolen from him.

But one of the former president’s fiercest defenders, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, insisted Sunday that Trump, with his fervent following, retains a huge political role as the party looks ahead to the 2022 midterm elections.

He called Trump the ‘most vibrant member of the Republican Party,’ adding, “We need to work with President Trump – we can’t do it without him.”

Despite Trump’s acquittal, Democrats insisted Sunday they had achieved a moral and political victory by securing some Republican votes in the Senate trial while permanentl­y tarring Trump’s name and clearing the way for President Joe Biden to quickly advance his agenda.

“We clearly won in the court of public opinion,” Representa­tive Don Beyer told CNN.

Trump has flirted with the idea of running for the White House again in 2024. A conviction Saturday would have likely barred him from holding federal office again.

Merely hinting at a possible run will keep him in political conversati­ons – and allow him to continue raising large amounts of money.

Yet a number of Republican­s have distanced themselves from the former president, who after all lost the election to Biden by seven million votes while also seeing his party lose control of the Senate.

Several Republican­s are lining up to seek the presidenti­al nomination in 2024, and they are eager to leave him in the party’s past. One of them, Nikki Haley, a former governor who served Trump as ambassador to the United Nations, was blunt in an interview posted Friday by Politico, saying Trump was increasing­ly isolated and had ‘lost any sort of political viability.’

But Republican­s who have openly opposed Trump have faced fierce blowbacks from the party’s base, and many remain fearful of his tendency to exact payback from critics.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Trump supporters protest outside the US Capitol in Washington, DC on Jan 6.
— AFP file photo Trump supporters protest outside the US Capitol in Washington, DC on Jan 6.

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