Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

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The New York Times says that Americans must fully confront what happened on Jan. 6 (June 10):

On Thursday night, a congressio­nal committee began an unflinchin­g conversati­on with the citizens of this country about, in the words of the committee chair, Donald Trump’s last stand, his attempt to spur the enemies of the Constituti­on to subvert American democracy.

Facts about what happened during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack were clearly and soberly laid out. Videotaped testimony underscore­d those findings. The rallying cries of the former president and the ensuing breach of the Capitol were shown for all to see.

It was the first of several hearings by the Jan. 6 committee that are meant, in part, for the history books. But the importance of the hearings isn’t simply about holding Trump, his allies and the flag-draped thugs storming the halls to account. The hearings challenge all Americans to recommit to the principles of democracy, ask how important those values are to us and face the threats posed to our democratic way of life.

Those threats are real and present, as Trump prepares to possibly again seek the office he has already desecrated once. The committee is doing its duty to defend against these threats by presenting evidence that the attack on the Capitol was not an isolated event, that it was a coordinate­d assault and that it continues to this very day. Our duty, as American citizens, is to participat­e fully in this process, by watching and absorbing the committee’s evidence and considerin­g what it would mean for our democracy if Trump were to run for president again.

The eloquent restraint of the committee’s leaders was equal to the gravity of the task before them. The chair, Bennie Thompson, a Black former schoolteac­her from Bolton, Miss., called back to history. He invoked the words of Abraham Lincoln, who wrote, before the critical election of 1864, “This morning, as for some days past, it seems exceedingl­y probable that this administra­tion will not be re-elected. Then it will be my duty to so cooperate with the president-elect,” in making a solemn commitment to accept the results even if a loss might have meant the end of our Union.

The vice chair, Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who has been marginaliz­ed by her fellow Republican­s for condemning Trump, warned of judgment from generation­s to come. Addressing her colleagues’ defense of “the indefensib­le,” she said, “There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain.”

The chilling videos and interviews aired in the two hours of the hearing did far more than replay the familiar horrors. They were revelatory and dramatic, showing how Trump urged his followers to violate the Constituti­on and refused to rein them in even when his most loyal aides pleaded with him to do so.

Republican politician­s, with brave exceptions such as Cheney, have dismissed the hearings as unimportan­t, a partisan show trial and an unwarrante­d political attack on Trump. The House Republican leader, Kevin McCarthy — whose office was seen being overrun in one of Thursday evening’s clips — declared that congressio­nal Republican­s will issue their own report on Jan. 6, focusing on the security preparatio­ns. This misdirecti­on tries to obscure the truth of what is in that footage: Many of the same Republican­s had to flee their chamber in panic as a howling mob rampaged through the Capitol.

The absence of full Republican participat­ion in the hearings does not diminish their importance. On the contrary, the absence has prodded Thompson and Cheney to ensure that every accusation they level is supported by evidence. Trump’s heretofore loyal attorney general, William Barr, testified that he told the president that his claims of a stolen election were “bullshit.” Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter, said she accepted Barr’s conclusion. And some of the same Republican­s who now downplay Jan. 6 are said to have asked for presidenti­al pardons in its aftermath.

These politician­s know that something truly terrible happened Jan. 6, and confrontin­g it is essential to healing our divided nation. At least 20 million people watched the opening session of the hearings Thursday; our democracy will be strengthen­ed if they are followed and experience­d by everyone, in the same way the Senate Watergate hearings into the misdeeds of an earlier president transfixed the nation in 1973.

The stakes today are arguably far higher: This investigat­ion is an attempt by the elected representa­tives and civil servants of our democracy to figure out how it nearly came undone. As Cheney said, “We all have a duty to ensure that what happened on Jan. 6 never happens again.”

Those Americans who still believe in Trump and his grievances may disagree with whatever conclusion­s the committee draws, but we urge them to see and hear the evidence the committee has collected from interviewi­ng 1,000 witnesses and gathering more than 140,000 documents.

Those Americans who were horrified by Jan. 6 also must not turn away in the belief that they already know what happened. There is much more to come in future hearings that has not yet been publicly disclosed. Gaining a deeper and more detailed understand­ing of the forces at work inside the White House, among Republican­s speaking and texting that day and at the Capitol is essential to facing an essential truth about democracy: that it depends on leaders who commit to a peaceful transfer of power.

The insurrecti­on and the lies that led to it, as Thompson put it, “have put two and a half centuries of constituti­onal democracy at risk.” The danger will remain until Americans fully confront what happened on that day. The committee has given us that chance.

The Los Angeles Times says the Senate’s modest action on gun safety is better than nothing (June 10):

It was hard to discern what was most upsetting during this week’s congressio­nal hearing on the national epidemic of gun violence.

Was it the pediatrici­an from Uvalde, Texas, describing the bodies of decapitate­d children in his emergency room May 24, so mutilated that they could only be identified by their “blood-splattered cartoon clothes”?

Was it the mother who talked about the last time she saw her daughter alive, watching her receive an award for good grades during fourth grade at Robb Elementary School, promising to take her out for ice cream later and then leaving for a day of work? It was a decision that she said “will haunt me for the rest of my life.”

Or was it the 11-year-old girl, who said she was so afraid of being killed by the gunman who’d already massacred her teacher and her classmates that she decided to play dead on the floor of her classroom by covering herself with blood from her friend’s body?

After this heart-wrenching testimony, the Democratic-controlled House took logical action and passed a package of reasonable gun safety measures. The bills would increase the age to buy semiautoma­tic weapons from 18 to 21, ban high-capacity magazines, create new requiremen­ts for gun owners to safely store their firearms and expand “red flag” laws that allow families and police to ask courts to order the removal of firearms from people at extreme risk of harming themselves or others.

But compoundin­g the tragedy of recent mass shootings in Uvalde; Buffalo, N.Y.; and Tulsa, Okla.; (as well as dozens more that don’t generate as many headlines — carnage in recent days in Portsmouth, Va.; Baltimore; Mesa, Ariz.; Saginaw, Mich.; Chattanoog­a, Tenn.; and Philadelph­ia has left 31 people injured and 15 dead, including a pregnant woman whose 25-week-old fetus was pulled from her body) was the all-but-certain likelihood that the House legislatio­n will stall in the Senate.

Even though gunshots are now the leading cause of death for American children — taking more young lives than car crashes — Republican­s’ resistance to limits on firearms will likely doom the bills in the 50-50 Senate, where the filibuster rule requires support from 10 GOP senators to advance debate.

The good news, if you can call it that in the nation that has the highest rate of firearm deaths among the world’s most developed countries, is that a bipartisan group of senators is trying to craft a gun safety bill that has a chance of passing the Senate and being signed into law. It would be much narrower than the House legislatio­n, and could include incentives encouragin­g states to create red-flag laws, an expansion of federal background checks to incorporat­e juvenile records and funding to improve school security and support mental health programs.

This is hardly the kind of bold, transforma­tive policy that we would like to see. The nation should expand background checks and reinstate the assault weapons ban, policies that have been shown to save lives and are supported by more than 60% of Americans, according to a Pew survey last year.

But doing something is better than nothing. And expanding red-flag laws to more states could make a positive difference. California is among 19 states that have laws allowing family members and law enforcemen­t officers to seek a court order to temporaril­y remove firearms from people at significan­t risk of harming themselves or others.

New research examining the first three years of the California law allowing these “gun violence restrainin­g orders” found that they were successful in removing firearms in 58 instances in which someone threatened a mass shooting, including six cases targeting schools. They were also effective in preventing possible self-harm, which was threatened in about 40% of the cases examined during the 3-year period. No suicides occurred among people who threatened self-harm and then had their guns removed by court order, according to the study from the Violence Prevention Research Program at UC Davis.

California can make this policy even more effective by educating the public that it’s possible to ask courts to remove someone’s guns and by training more judges, district attorneys and law enforcemen­t officers in how the process works. It was good to see last week that Gov. Gavin Newsom announced $11 million to support such outreach.

Senators in Washington, meanwhile, must push ahead and reach a bipartisan agreement to reduce the number of Americans who are killed, injured and traumatize­d by gun violence. It’s the very least they can do for the nation’s children.

The Guardian says the Jan. 6 committee has a greater purpose than merely investigat­ing the storming of the U.S. Capitol (June 10):

Despite its name, the Jan. 6 committee is not merely investigat­ing the storming of the U.S. Capitol in 2021. It is rightly examining the broader campaign to deny the will of the people. Its first public hearing on Thursday highlighte­d the terror of a day that led to the deaths of at least seven people and saw 140 police officers injured as a mob, armed with cable ties and stun guns, wielded flagpoles as clubs. Graphic footage and vivid testimony from a Capitol police officer — “I was slipping in people’s blood. … It was carnage” — reminded primetime viewers just how shocking and frightenin­g those events were.

Yet the greater horror is that the riot was not an anomaly, but the “culminatio­n of an attempted coup,” part of a monthslong effort to overturn the election result. It happened when more genteel methods had failed, though they got much further than they should have. “President Trump summoned the mob, assembled the mob and lit the flame of this attack,” said Liz Cheney, the House select committee’s vice chair.

Rioters have already been jailed. But those most culpable have yet to be held accountabl­e. The committee’s exhaustive efforts have establishe­d genuinely shocking revelation­s: when Donald Trump learned that supporters were chanting “Hang Mike Pence”, he reportedly remarked that his vice president might “deserve” it. The sheer number of those in his inner circle — including his daughter Ivanka — who were clear that he had lost and, in many cases, told him so, was damning. Establishi­ng that Trump knew full well that Joe Biden had won might, potentiall­y, help to build a legal case against him. That task, however difficult, looks simple compared with the challenge of changing voters’ minds, already largely made up. Many of the worst aspects took place in full view. Trump repeatedly lied that the election had been stolen. He urged his supporters “to fight like hell.” He refused to call them off when begged by top Republican­s. As one rioter said, “I answered the call of my president.”

Most Americans — 70% — believe that finding out what happened that day matters, but 52% of Republican­s judge it not very or not at all important. In a world of “alternativ­e facts,” the truth can simply be ignored: Fox News did not broadcast the hearing.

As November’s midterms approach, voters appear more concerned about the cost of living than threats to democracy which they may, wrongly, imagine to have been overcome. At best, the hearings may boost Democratic fundraisin­g, persuade a few reluctant voters to the polls, or give pause to the undecided who were thinking of giving Republican­s another chance. Trump remains the favorite to be his party’s presidenti­al candidate in 2024. Senior Republican­s who denounced him after the riot fell quickly and shamefully silent; Cheney and her colleague Adam Kinzinger have been vilified for serving on the committee.

The committee is not only establishi­ng the historical record, but seeking to safeguard institutio­ns in the future. Next time, Republican­s will be more organized and more ruthless in pursuing victory whatever the ballots say.

The GOP has systematic­ally sought control of election processes and installed its people in the judiciary. The far right — including members of militias who played a critical role in the Jan. 6 attacks, such as the Proud Boys — are moving off the streets and seeking elected office. Next time, no mob may be required. Just as the storming of the Capitol was one in a series of assaults upon democracy, so this must be only one of many attempts to uphold it. If these hearings appear to preach to the converted, they are no less essential. The alternativ­e — giving up — is unthinkabl­e, because the Trumpists haven’t, and won’t.

According to The Washington Post, the Fed should go big to fight inflation (June 13):

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell proved he could act swiftly and decisively in March 2020 as the coronaviru­s exploded around the world and large parts of the economy halted. Now, Powell needs to adopt bold and aggressive tactics again to fight inflation. The time for steady and gradual moves from the Fed is over.

Ideally, Powell and his team would announce a larger-than-planned 75-basispoint increase in the Fed’s benchmark interest rate this week, raising it from about 1% now to about 1.75%. For the past month, top Fed officials have been signaling they will do a 50-basis-point increase, but that was before the disastrous May inflation report that came out Friday and showed large price shocks in gas, groceries, rent, airfares, cars and various services. Inflation is broad-based. It won’t be easily cured. And numerous polls and surveys show Americans expect high inflation to stick around. The Fed needs to take decisive action — the sooner, the better. Otherwise, Powell risks losing the public’s confidence.

In the past decade, the Fed has tended to prefer modest moves in order not to spook markets or the public. But inflation is already spooking people. The stock market has slumped into bear market territory. The bond market is flashing recession warning signs. The real estate market is drying up. Investors predict the Fed has to hike interest rates 175 basis points by the end of September. That means at least one 75-basis-point hike would be needed. The Fed gains little by delaying the pain that everyone sees coming at this point. The biggest risk for the Fed is not doing enough to fight inflation. The board already made this mistake earlier in the year. It should not stumble again.

Danielle DiMartino Booth, CEO of Quill Intelligen­ce and a former top Dallas Fed official, put it bluntly Monday: “The Federal Reserve’s slow and steady approach to tightening policy is now an outright insult to working Americans.” Inflation is up 8.6% in the past year, far outpacing average pay gains of 5.2%.

At a minimum, the Fed needs to enact the expected 50-basis-point increase this week and heavily signal the possibilit­y of a larger hike at its next meeting in late July. The ongoing strength of the job market gives the Fed some room to hike aggressive­ly now without doing much, if any, damage to employment. That window could close soon as executives increasing­ly fear a recession and will likely pull back on hiring. It’s yet another reason to go big now.

The convention­al wisdom is that monetary policy is mostly about talk and setting expectatio­ns; former Fed chair Ben Bernanke recently said it’s “98% talk and 2% action.” But the nation needs to see action at this time. After wrongly calling inflation “transitory” for much of last year, the Fed must prove that it is serious about tackling this substantia­l threat to the U.S. economy.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miah Cerrillo, a fourth-grade student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and survivor of last month’s mass shooting there, appears on a screen June 8 during a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on gun violence.
ANDREW HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS Miah Cerrillo, a fourth-grade student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and survivor of last month’s mass shooting there, appears on a screen June 8 during a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on gun violence.

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