The Star Malaysia

Most presidents fear impeachmen­t but not Trump

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WASHINGTON: Impeachmen­t is about the worst thing that can happen to a president – unless that president is Donald Trump.

There is no question that having that historic asterisk as only the third US president ever impeached will hurt him personally.

More than any other occupant of the White House, the real estate developer and reality TV performer obsesses over his image. Trump’s name and patina of glitzy success is literally a brand he sells for millions of dollars around the world.

But it’s equally true that the Republican adores a good fight. And impeachmen­t is the Olympics of Washington brawling.

“This moment is (perfect) for a person like him,” said Rich Hanley, a professor of communicat­ions at

Quinnipiac University.

The Democrats in the House of Representa­tives are expected to vote to impeach Trump, probably on Wednesday. Then, as the president knows all too well, his Republican Party, which controls the Senate, will vote to acquit.

The outcome is likely to be as preordaine­d as one of those absurd WWE wrestling bouts that Trump has always loved.

Which makes a perfect set-up for the showman-in-chief.

First he gets to demonise opponents, throwing around words like “treason”, “crook”, “crazy” and “sick.” Then he declares victory and turns the entire thing into a campaign ad for his 2020 re-election.

“He’s already seen the narrative arc of this particular episode of the

Trump show,” Hanley said.

From Andrew Johnson, who got impeached in 1868, no president has exactly enjoyed the notoriety.

Richard Nixon resigned over the Watergate affair just before he could be impeached, while Bill Clinton fought bitterly to avoid being convicted by the Senate in 1999.

But Trump, a veteran of scandals, comes into the ordeal uniquely ready.

After all, he has already ridden out allegation­s of sexual assault and other misconduct by two dozen women over the years.

He has withstood a two year probe by a special prosecutor into whether he was wittingly or unwittingl­y getting election help from Russian agents and he has brushed off accusation­s of using his office to benefit his real estate empire.

Daily he crudely insults opponents, swears in public, and tells so many lies and exaggerati­ons that fact checkers can barely keep up. The list goes on.

As Trump himself said in 2016: “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters.”

Far from hunkering down, Trump holds rallies to whip his base into a frenzy over the “witch hunt.” He tweets his outrage dozens of times a day – sometimes more than a 100.

“Nixon and Clinton largely stayed out of it. Trump has thrust himself into the middle of it repeatedly,” said Allan Lichtman, distinguis­hed professor of history at American University.

“He absolutely owns it.”

It’s a high-risk, high-gain tactic that fits in with Trump’s entire upending of Washington.

And having “shattered” every other norm, Trump’s now doing the same to impeachmen­t, Lichtman said, presenting his Republican Party no other option than to defend him all the way.

“The real reason Republican­s have to defend Donald Trump is that the only thing they’re left with is Donald Trump.”

So Washington may be in chaos, but Teflon Trump is thriving.

The latest poll, from Quinnipiac, showed him with 43%t job approval. Even if that is the worst score for a president at this stage of an administra­tion in many decades, it is Trump’s personal best.

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