Daily Press

Cheney owed praise for work on committee

- By Michael Sozan Michael Sozan is a senior fellow on the Democracy Policy team at the Center for American Progress. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

These days, many progressiv­es find themselves doing the once-unthinkabl­e: heralding the work of staunch conservati­ve Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo. Cheney’s bipartisan co-leadership of the House’s Select Committee to Investigat­e the January 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol illustrate­s the importance of a politicall­y diverse alliance to protect future elections and democracy.

For more than a month, Americans have been riveted by the committee’s hearings. Led by former career prosecutor­s, the committee’s thorough investigat­ion has revealed compelling evidence that former president Donald Trump led a wide-ranging conspiracy to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election result, even though top aides repeatedly, and accurately, told him that Joe Biden had lawfully won.

Built on lies about election fraud, Trump knowingly unleashed a violent mob on the U.S. Capitol to stop the peaceful transition of power, threatenin­g the lives of his vice president, members of Congress and Capitol police officers. To this day, Trump continues to lead a multiprong­ed quest to seize political power by attempting to influence committee witnesses and threaten state officials who follow the law.

As the hearings continue to uncover these facts, Cheney has put country over political party.

Until a few months ago, Cheney was a top member of House Republican leadership. She had built a long career steeped in conservati­ve ideology and policy priorities. She supported military interventi­ons and torture, opposed abortion rights, and voted against legislatio­n to set federal baseline standards for voting rights and election security, just to name a few.

But when Trump attempted to subvert the Constituti­on and hold onto power, Cheney rose above party loyalty. She voted to certify the presidenti­al election and was one of only 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump for inciting the insurrecti­on. Even when the Senate failed to convict Trump, Cheney used her bully pulpit to speak against his unlawful and un-American actions while telling fellow congressio­nal Republican­s that Biden was the legitimate president.

Cheney knew her actions could imperil her own political career, as well as her personal safety. Indeed, her views deeply angered Trump, many of her Wyoming constituen­ts and other Republican­s, including her state party, which censured her. For speaking the truth, Cheney went from being a key member of House leadership to unceremoni­ously booted from that perch. Several MAGA extremists are now challengin­g Cheney for her House seat.

Yet Cheney remains undeterred. Cheney crystalliz­ed our nation’s perilous moment in history at the first committee hearing. She proclaimed:

“As Americans, we all have a duty to ensure what happened on January 6 never happens again, to set aside partisan battles to stand together to perpetuate and preserve our great Republic.”

Weeks later, in a rousing speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Library, Cheney again described the stakes: “No party and no people and no nation can defend and perpetuate a constituti­onal republic if they accept a leader who’s gone to war with the rule of law, with the democratic process, or with a peaceful transition of power, with the Constituti­on itself.”

Working alongside fellow Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and committee Democrats, Cheney has proven to be a substantiv­e member with a keen grasp of the facts and not prone to grandstand­ing.

Cheney’s actions are a model for how Americans from across the political spectrum can unite to help save democracy. Democrats and Republican­s have sharp policy disagreeme­nts on issues such as health care, climate change and gun violence prevention. But policy debates are nearly meaningles­s unless Americans can agree on basic rules to preserve our republic.

Cheney concluded her Reagan

Library speech by saying, “We must love our country, and stand above politics to protect her, and never yield in her defense.” It’s a shame that more Republican­s have yet to heed this call and exemplify this leadership.

Constituti­onal patriots of all political stripes must work together to protect our elections. The future of our democracy depends on it, and the world is watching.

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