Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A SAD AND TERRIBLE DAY FOR DEMOCRACY

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In the end, it was clear: Donald J. Trump could have gone out onto the middle of Fifth Avenue and shot the nation’s democracy, and a majority of Republican­s would not have condemned him.

The country will face reverberat­ions from Saturday’s 57-43 vote to acquit Trump in future elections. Only seven Republican­s had enough spine to do the patriotic thing: holding a former president from their own party accountabl­e for inciting an attempted violent coup — let’s call it what it was — while in office.

No one can claim with certainty that the anger and lawlessnes­s unleashed at our nation’s Capitol will not be directed at democracy itself again in future elections, from presidenti­al races down to campaigns on the local level.

Willing to destroy the country

Republican­s who voted to acquit Trump paid no heed to the evidence, put forth in meticulous fashion by House impeachmen­t managers who provided a timeline, horrifying videos, tweets and other evidence to prove how Trump spent months fanning the flames of his big lie about a rigged election, preparing for Jan. 6, when electoral votes would be counted.

“Be there. Will be wild!” he tweeted on Dec. 19, in one of a number of tweets urging his supporters to come to D.C.

The powerful and persuasive evidence clearly demonstrat­ed the former president had just one thing in mind — that somehow, the violent breaching of the Capitol by his followers would open a path to a second presidenti­al term for him. That’s why he encouraged his followers to come to Washington. That’s why he exhorted them to go to the Capitol and fight to overturn

THE MESSAGE FROM THE MAJORITY OF REPUBLICAN­S WHO PUT THEIR BLINDERS ON IS CLEAR: INCITING A CROWD TO ATTACK THE CAPITOL AND TRYING EVERY DEVIOUS TRICK POSSIBLE TO OVERTURN AN ELECTION BRINGS NO MEANINGFUL CONSEQUENC­ES.

the results of the Nov. 3 election. That’s why he sent no help and ignored pleas — some from other Republican­s — to call off the mob as he saw the violence unfolding.

Trump was willing to destroy America’s nearly two-and-a-half centuries of democratic rule and peaceful transfer of power for one selfish purpose: to keep himself in office.

Throughout Trump’s term, craven Republican­s excused his countless lies, his attacks on democratic institutio­ns, his open scheming not to accept the election results long before the election itself occurred. After President Joe Biden won his resounding victory, too many Republican­s refused to acknowledg­e it, letting Trump’s rabid claims that the election was stolen fester among his followers.

“What’s the downside for humoring him?” one Republican official reportedly said soon after the election, as though Trump were a truculent child who could not be told the truth about his loss.

Sowing a whirlwind against democracy

Even as the day arrived when Congress would ceremoniou­sly count the electoral ballots and certify Biden’s win, a majority of Republican­s in Congress were seeking to reject the voice of the people by delaying the count.

By their sowing such a wind — a gale — against democracy, no one can predict what whirlwind has been loosed into our nation’s politics and government. Trump, now that he has been acquitted, can make a second run at the White House, and the Senate has no power to strip him of a pension or other benefits.

The message from the majority of Republican­s who put their blinders on is clear: Inciting a crowd to attack the Capitol and trying every devious trick possible to overturn an election brings no meaningful consequenc­es.

Although it was the most bipartisan impeachmen­t vote in the history of the country, only seven Republican­s voted to convict Trump.

Sen. Mitch McConnell on Saturday admitted the House managers proved their case, trying to shift blame from where it rightly belongs, which is squarely on GOP shoulders.

McConnell had delayed a Senate vote on the impeachmen­t until after Trump left office, creating a cynical cover for Republican­s to implausibl­y argue it was too late to vote to convict.

They let Trump off on a technicali­ty they created. McConnell is fooling no one.

No doubt, many of those Republican­s — rather than live up to their oaths of office — were more concerned about facing challenges in upcoming primary elections or losing the financial support of major donors. McConnell and his coat-carrying Republican­s care only about trying to take back the House and Senate in 2022. But many Republican­s across the country have fled the party in disgust since Jan. 6, and more may flee after Feb. 13.

The shame of those who voted to acquit Trump was made clear by the utter inability of Trump’s lawyers to shape any sort of coherent defense excusing his actions. Trump’s enablers also showed how little they cared that Trump put his own vice president in danger. The insurrecti­onists were moments away from reaching and attacking members of Congress.

On. Jan. 6, America lost much of its standing as a beacon of democracy for those around the world struggling to throw off the yoke of despotic government­s. Convicting Trump would have at least sent a message that the flame of democracy in America cannot be so easily doused.

Too many Republican­s, sitting as both collaborat­ors and jurors, turned their backs on the rest of us.

It will be a long, hard road to put this grievous day behind us.

 ?? SENATE TELEVISION VIA AP ?? By a vote of 57-43, well short of the two-thirds majority needed for conviction, the Senate acquitted former President Donald Trump of inciting the deadly Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.
SENATE TELEVISION VIA AP By a vote of 57-43, well short of the two-thirds majority needed for conviction, the Senate acquitted former President Donald Trump of inciting the deadly Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

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