The Pak Banker

Supporting impeachmen­t inquiry

- Raul Reyes

With an impeachmen­t inquiry underway in the House of Representa­tives, each day seems to bring breaking news regarding the president's dealings with Ukraine. On Wednesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo admitted that he was on the July 25th call between President Donald Trump and the president of Ukraine. On Thursday, the former special envoy to Ukraine arrived on Capitol Hill to give closeddoor testimony to three House committees. By Friday, House Democrats were vowing to issue subpoenas to the White House for documents related to the inquiry.

Like other Americans, Latinos have followed these events with a mix of shock, disgust, and disbelief. But Hispanics have a unique stake in the impeachmen­t inquiry. The president has put our civil rights, and at times our lives, at risk with his reckless rhetoric and behavior. His administra­tion has disproport­ionately policed our communitie­s. Russian interferen­ce in U.S. elections has directly impacted Latinos - so President Trump must be held accountabl­e for his actions.

Latinos should support the impeachmen­t inquiry because the president who has wielded the law like a cudgel against our communitie­s should not be above it himself. Trump has shown no qualms in bringing the full force of the U.S. government to bear down upon child migrants, asylum seekers, DREAMers, and other vulnerable immigrants. He has terrorized Latino communitie­s with the threat of mass ICE raids. His administra­tion attempted to subvert the 2020 Census with the addition of a citizenshi­p question. Such improper acts, even when blocked by the courts, were fine by Trump. It is only when he faces scrutiny that he cries foul and discovers the concept of fairness. How ironic that the most powerful individual in the world now sees himself as a beleaguere­d victim of historic proportion­s.

Trump's immigratio­n policy is predicated on deporting "illegals" because of their purported criminalit­y and threat to national security. Such assumption­s are contradict­ed by research, but consider the mounting evidence that Trump tried to coerce the Ukrainian president into investigat­ing Joe Biden … or that he seems more interested in promoting good relations with Russia, who his own intelligen­ce officials say meddled in the 2016 elections, than with Mexico, our neighbor and top trading partner. This president would appear to be more of a threat to national security than any undocument­ed immigrant could ever be.

The question of foreign influence in American elections is central to the impeachmen­t inquiry. It is likewise critically important to Latinos, because in 2016 Russia's Internet Research Agency aggressive­ly targeted African Americans and Latinos in their attempts to sow discord within the U.S. electorate. Last year, a report released by the Senate found that Russia's efforts were aimed at getting Hispanics not to trust the government, and to spread cynicism about the 2016 election, thereby depressing voter turnout. After Trump was elected, Russian operatives continued to use social media platforms to stoke tensions around Hispanics and immigratio­n, with the goal of destabiliz­ing our democracy.

It's no wonder that solid majorities of Latinos are concerned about the president's potential betrayal of the country. According to a new Quinnipiac University poll, 62 percent of Latino voters think Trump should be impeached and removed from office. About two-thirds of Latinos (67 percent) say that the president believes he is above the law, and that he abuses his power (65 percent). Democratic presidenti­al candidate Julian Castro, leading Hispanic lawmakers, and advocacy groups like the Hispanic Federation, UnidosUS, and Voto Latino have come out in support of the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Latino support for impeachmen­t is not a partisan affair, nor reflective of antipathy towards the president. Impeachmen­t is a serious matter, with sacred principles at stake. Latinos support the House inquiry because we believe in this country and its institutio­ns.

True, not all Latinos support impeachmen­t. On NPR, Alfonso Aguilar of the Latino Partnershi­p for Conservati­ve Principles said that, while it was "inappropri­ate" for Trump to suggest that Ukraine look into the Bidens, there was not a "clear-cut smoking gun showing clearly that he (Trump) violated the law." Then Aguilar pivoted to what he termed Joe Biden's "totally inappropri­ate" behavior. Yet the transcript of Trump's call with the Ukrainian president, released by the White House, is the smoking gun. It reveals that Trump put his own political goals ahead of America's interest in a strong Ukraine.

 ??  ?? The president has put our civil rights, and at times our lives, at risk with his reckless rhetoric and behavior. His administra­tion has disproport­ionately policed our communitie­s. Russian interferen­ce in US elections has directly impacted Latinos - so President Trump must be held
accountabl­e for his actions.
The president has put our civil rights, and at times our lives, at risk with his reckless rhetoric and behavior. His administra­tion has disproport­ionately policed our communitie­s. Russian interferen­ce in US elections has directly impacted Latinos - so President Trump must be held accountabl­e for his actions.

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