Houston Chronicle

GOP offers a shoddy defense of Trump

Michael Gerson says says it’s time to be cynical about Republican­s looking objectivel­y at facts brought to light in the impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

- Gerson writes a syndicated column for the Washington Post Writers Group.

Unless you were listening closely, you might have missed one of the most illuminati­ng moments so far in Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t saga.

During Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman’s testimony Tuesday before House impeachmen­t investigat­ors, he said: “I realized that if Ukraine pursued an investigat­ion into the Bidens and Burisma, it would likely be interprete­d as a partisan play, which would undoubtedl­y result in Ukraine losing the bipartisan support it has thus far maintained. This would all undermine U.S. national security.”

It is the second sentence that cuts. Vindman not only argued that Trump’s crude and obvious quid pro quo was inappropri­ate. As a regional expert, Vindman was concerned that Trump’s actions would weaken support for a front-line country resisting Russian aggression and thus compromise American security interests.

It was in this context that Ohio Sen. Rob Portman tested a Republican response to impeachmen­t. “I thought it was inappropri­ate for the president to ask a foreign government to investigat­e a political opponent,” he said. “I also do not think it’s an impeachabl­e offense.”

Portman is usually found in the more thoughtful portion of his tribe. But this answer conspicuou­sly, even deceptivel­y, ignores the issue at hand. A decision about impeachmen­t not only involves the response to a specific act — say, a thirdrate burglary. It necessaril­y entails a judgment about the fitness for high office of the actor. In Trump’s case, the problem is not a slimy phone call in a lifetime of slimy phone calls. The problem is a president who puts his personal interests ahead of U.S. national security and who still finds nothing wrong with his “perfect” conversati­on. The corrupt act reveals a corrupt man, unable to make the most rudimentar­y judgments about the nation’s good.

In the light of all this — against all my instincts — I am sinking into cynicism. If the best of the Republican Party is willing to make shallow, shoddy excuses for an unfit president, then the path ahead is disturbing­ly clear. The details of the case for impeachmen­t, it seems, will not finally matter. Fearing the revolt of their base

— and the retributio­n of an emotionall­y unstable president — Senate Republican­s (with one admirable exception, Utah’s Mitt Romney) have already chosen their final position: acquittal. And whatever is revealed in the course of the investigat­ion — no matter how vomitous — will fall just short of an impeachabl­e offense. The goal posts will move and move until they are in the next county. And tolerance for corruption in high places will continue to grow.

In an ideal world, senators would turn to political philosophe­r John Rawls for guidance. He proposed that judgments about justice should be conducted behind a “veil of ignorance” — as though we did not know the station in society we would inhabit. On this theory, Republican senators should ask: If I did not know whether the president were a Republican or a Democrat, would his or her willingnes­s to compromise national security for selfish political reasons demonstrat­e unfitness and justify conviction?

But almost no Republican senators, as far as I can tell, are operating behind the veil. Their verdict is predetermi­ned by partisansh­ip. And I am cynical enough to believe that very few Democrats — if the situation were exactly reversed and a Democratic president were being judged for similar actions — would heroically resist their political incentives.

Only two eventualit­ies might change Republican calculatio­ns on impeachmen­t. First, the Republican base might turn against Trump in significan­t numbers. This is unlikely to the point of impossibil­ity. No matter what the impeachmen­t investigat­ion reveals, Fox News and conservati­ve talk radio will produce an alternativ­e narrative to which partisans can cling — even if this involves the defamation of patriots such as Vindman, and even if this involves conspiracy theories and massive revisions to reality.

Second, Americans outside the Republican base might turn against Trump so vigorously and completely that the political incentives for Republican officehold­ers begin to change. What does it profit senators to keep the base if they lose the rest of the electorate? Such a decisive shift in public sentiment also seems unlikely, but who knows what further ethical horrors a corruption investigat­ion featuring Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani might reveal?

There is, of course, another factor that might change. Republican senators could actually take the deliberati­ve role of their institutio­n seriously. They could recover a proper outrage at public corruption. They could recall why they entered public service in the first place and choose to pay the cost of conscience.

I still want to believe this is possible. But I’m not holding my breath.

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