Las Vegas Review-Journal

A rushed impeachmen­t

- VICTOR JOECKS Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

I Tcertainly was historic that House Democrats impeached President Donald Trump a second time. They presided over the lowest-stakes impeachmen­t in history.

To wit, Trump won’t even be president by the time a Senate trial begins.

What you saw Wednesday was mostly cynical political posturing. Democrats barely even listed evidence to support their charge of incitement of insurrecti­on. They highlighte­d this excerpt from Trump’s speech: “If you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore,” he said.

The charges continue, “Thus incited by the President Trump, members of the crowd he had addressed” attacked the Capitol.

Leave aside for a moment that Trump never called for violence. As longtime Nevada journalist Thomas Mitchell has pointed out, Trump finished his speech at 1:11 p.m. Eastern time, according to NPR. He delivered that line a few minutes before he concluded. But he delivered his address in a park outside the White House. That’s nearly two miles away from the Capitol, which is a 30- to 40-minute walk.

But at 1:10 p.m., Elijah Schaffer, a reporter with

The Blaze, posted a video of people at the Capitol already attempting to push through a police line.

How could Trump’s call to “fight like hell” incite a riot that had already begun?

Then there are the unexploded bombs found outside the RNC and DNC. That indicates some people came to D.C. planning to commit heinous crimes. Making a bomb isn’t a spur-of-themoment activity.

Democrats are playing fast and loose with the word “incite.” Legally, incitement requires advocacy of violence. Trump never took that step. Colloquial­ly, incitement means to stir up or provoke. Certainly, Trump fired up his supporters. But if that is now an impeachabl­e offense, a host of Democrats should be impeached too.

Start with President-elect Joe Biden. In 2012, Biden told an African American audience that Republican presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney wanted to put “y’all back in chains.” In 2018, then-minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said, “I just don’t even know why there aren’t uprisings all over the country. And maybe there will be.” Would they have been responsibl­e if one of their supporters had committed violence based on those remarks?

In 2016, hours after then-president Barack Obama delivered a speech implying that police department­s were cesspools of racism, an African American man shot and killed several Dallas police officers. The police chief said the shooter told negotiator­s that he wanted to kill white police officers. In 2017, a Bernie Sanders supporter shot up a congressio­nal baseball practice.

But just like Trump, those Democrats didn’t “incite” violence. Spewing heated political rhetoric doesn’t make one responsibl­e for the subsequent actions of your supporters.

The most immediate impact of sending charges to the Senate is that a trial may delay confirmati­on of Biden’s nominees and his legislativ­e agenda. In that case, take all the time you need.

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