Houston Chronicle

Drop impeachmen­t, just censure Trump

Marc A. Thiessen says Democrats would even gain GOP support if they give up removal proceeding­s and repudiate president’s misconduct.

- Thiessen writes a syndicated column for The Washington Post Writers Group.

On Jan. 20, 2017, The Washington Post reported that “The effort to impeach President Donald John Trump is already underway.” Even before Trump took the oath of office that day, Democratic groups were looking for a pretext to remove him from office.

They thought they would get one from special counsel Robert Mueller. Instead, Mueller found that Trump did not conspire with Russia to steal the 2016 election. But rather than capitalize on that moment of vindicatio­n, Trump decided to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory and give Democrats the pretext they had been looking for — by asking Ukraine to investigat­e Hunter Biden.

Democrats can’t believe their luck. Unlike Russia, this time Trump actually did something wrong. The president’s phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wasn’t “perfect,” as Trump repeatedly claims. A USA Today-Suffolk University poll finds that only 30 percent of Americans believe there was nothing wrong with the call. But the same poll finds that just 38 percent think it was an impeachabl­e offense, while 21 percent say it was wrong but not impeachabl­e.

That means most Americans agree with Democrats that Trump did something wrong, but only a minority believe his misconduct rises to the level of high crimes and misdemeano­rs. Worse still for Democrats, according to an Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll, 53 percent of Americans believe that their impeachmen­t inquiry is politicall­y motivated. And in six key swing states likely to decide the 2020 election, voters oppose removing Trump from office by a margin of 53 percent to 43 percent, according to a New York Times-Siena College survey.

So, unless some bombshell evidence emerges to turn public opinion decisively in favor of impeachmen­t, Trump will not be removed from office. Impeachmen­t would be a purely symbolic act.

So why not drop impeachmen­t and censure him instead?

There is precedent for doing so. In 1834, the Senate voted to censure President Andrew Jackson (whose portrait Trump has proudly hung in the Oval Office) over his stonewalli­ng of a congressio­nal investigat­ion into Jackson’s decision to shut down the Second Bank of the United States. If Congress voted to censure Trump, it would make him only the second president in history to have been so explicitly reprimande­d.

The House could easily pass such a censure resolution and might even do so with a bipartisan majority. Right now, House Republican­s feel no pressure to vote for impeachmen­t, and Senate Republican­s feel no pressure to convict, because most Americans agree with them that Trump’s conduct is not impeachabl­e. They know that, if anything, impeachmen­t poses a greater political danger to Democrats, putting at risk 31 House seats held by freshman Democrats in districts Trump carried in 2016.

But by censuring instead of impeaching the president, Democrats could easily turn the political calculus against the GOP. The Post reports that a growing number of Republican­s are ready to acknowledg­e that the president did use military aid as leverage to force Ukraine to investigat­e the Biden family but that “the president’s action was not illegal and does not rise to the level of an impeachabl­e offense.”

To oppose a censure resolution, Republican­s would have to argue not just that the president’s misconduct does not rise to the level of an impeachabl­e offense, but that there was no misconduct at all. Clearly there was, and Americans know it. Censure would put public opinion squarely on the Democrats’ side and put Republican­s in a political bind.

A bipartisan censure vote would ultimately be more damaging to Trump than impeachmen­t along party lines. The impeachmen­t inquiry is energizing Trump voters, who believe Democrats are trying to invalidate their votes by removing Trump from office. Censure would take away that argument. It would be dispiritin­g to Trump’s base, especially if some Republican­s joined Democrats in voting to rebuke the president. Trump would be furious at a bipartisan vote of censure.

The Senate would not be required to take up a censure resolution passed by the House, but so what? Jackson’s censure was passed by only one house of Congress. If the House censured the president, and the Senate failed to even vote on the resolution, it would look very bad for Republican­s.

Will Democrats do it? Probably not. Their ravenous base wants to brook no compromise. But because impeachmen­t will be nothing more than an act of censure anyway, why not actually censure Trump and pressure some Republican­s to vote against their president? Then leave the decision of whether to remove Trump from office where it belongs — in the hands of the American people next November.

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