Albuquerque Journal

Impeachmen­t hearing = patriotism vs. partisansh­ip

- E. J. DIONNE

The contrast between Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., and George Kent, a deputy assistant secretary of state, told us everything we needed to know about the impeachmen­t hearings into President Trump that began Wednesday.

Nunes, the ranking Republican member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, wanted to make everything about party. Kent, a lifelong civil servant, wanted to make everything about country.

Nunes’ opening statement was a screed against “the Democrats’ scorched-earth war against President Trump,” “their impeachmen­t sham,” and a “politicize­d bureaucrac­y.”

The crisp, bow-tie-wearing Kent, who testified along with William B. Taylor, the acting U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, could not have known what Nunes would say. But Kent’s initial remarks provided an eloquent rebuke to the Republican’s crass and appalling insult to those who devote their profession­al lives to their country.

Noting that he was “the third generation of my family to have chosen a career in public service,” Kent declared: “It was unexpected, and most unfortunat­e, to watch some Americans — including those who allied themselves with corrupt Ukrainians in pursuit of private agendas — launch attacks on dedicated public servants advancing U.S. interests in Ukraine,” Kent said. “In my opinion, those attacks undermined U.S. and Ukrainian national interests and damaged our critical bilateral relationsh­ip.”

Take that, Mr. Nunes — and Rudy Giuliani. And several Republican­s furnished further proof that they are far more interested in discrediti­ng the hearings than in establishi­ng the truth. GOP members briefly delayed the proceeding­s to demand yet again that the whistleblo­wer who let the world know about Trump’s efforts to push the Ukrainian government to smear Joe Biden be called to testify. Committee Chair Adam Schiff, D-Calif., whose own opening statement was largely a recitation of known facts, shut them down.

Thus were the terms of the coming struggle establishe­d. Democrats hope that piling up evidence offered almost entirely by people with no political axes to grind will shift public opinion against Trump. Republican­s hope to obscure the facts by arguing that there is no such thing as objective truth anymore because anyone who says anything critical of Trump must have a partisan motive.

In insisting that integrity will eventually win,

Trump’s critics point back to the Watergate hearings in 1973 and 1974 as turning the tide against Richard Nixon. “It was the open hearings that changed the American public’s mind, then that changed elected Republican­s’ minds,” Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., observed on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” shortly before Wednesday’s session began.

Well, yes. But we were a far more open-minded and less partisan country back then. There were many more moderate and liberal Republican­s as well as more openness to the other side’s views — and no Fox News and no right-wing talk radio empire.

Gallup recently contrasted its surveys on removing Trump from office with comparable polls about Nixon in August 1974. Gallup found that while 92% of Republican­s rejected removing Trump last month, only 59% felt that way about Nixon.

Other polls have found somewhat more Republican support for driving Trump from office, and it’s also true that by August 1974, the country had gone through more than a year of highly public Watergate inquiries.

Nonetheles­s, no one can deny how much partisan polarizati­on has deepened since Nixon. Moreover, with the 2020 election looming, Democrats have much less time than their forebears did 45 years ago. And they are operating in an informatio­n environmen­t that is not conducive to sober reflection.

The political scientists Jennifer Hochschild and Katherine Levine Einstein posed the key question in their 2015 book that predated the rise of Trump, “Do Facts Matter?” Their conclusion was not encouragin­g. As they wrote in The Washington Post, to persuade a “misinforme­d voter ... to reject false knowledge, change policy views, disagree with friends, agree with former enemies, and perhaps abandon leaders or even a political party, requires an enormous amount of effort and resources.”

Trump — with help from Nunes and his colleagues — seems to be counting on exactly that. They expect that throwing around magic words such as “the Steele dossier” and “Hillary Clinton” should be enough to keep their partisans onside and maintain pressure on Senate Republican­s to ignore the president’s abuses of power.

But perhaps, perhaps, patriots such as Kent will make some Republican­s think twice. In his prepared statement, he noted that “the principled promotion of the rule of law and institutio­nal integrity has been so necessary to our strategy for a successful Ukraine.”

Yes, and both are just as essential to a successful United States of America.

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