Dayton Daily News

Dems try not to focus on impeachmen­t

- By Bill Barrow

Democrats aren’t CHICAGO — ready to embrace the I-word.

A day after separate legal hammers dropped nearly simultaneo­usly on two former members of President Donald Trump’s inner circle, Democrats in Washington and across the country faced a del- icate balance as they sought to take political advantage of his growing troubles without alienating moderates and inde- pendents turned off by talk of impeachmen­t.

I nstead of calli n g for Trump’s removal, corruption is the new buzzword in Democratic circles. They’re not just pointing to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s conviction on tax evasion and other charges and longtime fixer Michael Cohen’s plea deal implicatin­g the president in an illegal campaign finance scheme. They’ve also got the indictment Tuesday of a second Republican member of Congress.

As the party faithful gath- ered in Chicago on Wednesday for the Democratic National Committee’s summer meet- ing, Chairman Tom Perez ticked off the growing list of legal troubles for Trump and other Republican­s. An “out- of-control” situation, he said, demands that voters “put up guardrails” by returning Democrats to power.

With less than three months before the midterms, that could be a potent political argument. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who could return to the speak- er’s chair if Democrats pick up at least 23 new seats in November, was in her home state of California, where she recalled that Democrats won the House in 2006 by hammering Republican corruption in the wake of the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal.

“This time, the culture of corruption, cronyism and incompeten­ce is so pervasive that it’s in the White House,” Pelosi told the San Francisco audience Wednesday at the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California.

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