Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump rips into Dems after acquittal

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — A day after his acquittal in the Senate, President Donald Trump celebrated with Republican allies and ripped Democrats — and the lone Republican — who backed his conviction, expressing a litany of lingering grievances in a somewhat subdued stream-of-consciousn­ess monologue.

“It worked out,” Trump told dozens of Republican lawmakers, Cabinet officials, lawyers and political allies who packed the East Room of the White House. “We went through hell unfairly.”

The president’s triumphant display, which came two days after a State of the Union address in which partisan acrimony was laid bare both by the president and members of Congress, was not an attempt to unify the nation.

Despite Trump’s calm tone, his words only added fuel to his bitter feud with Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the raging fires of partisansh­ip.

“Nancy Pelosi is a horrible, vicious person,” Trump said Thursday. “They’re vicious as hell, and they’ll probably come back for more.”

Democrats, he claimed, “want to destroy our country.”

Trump’s unapologet­ic stridency and the event’s fanfare — he entered to “Hail to the Chief” and basked in a long ovation — stood in stark contrast to the contrition expressed 21 years ago by President Bill Clinton, who apologized to the nation after his Senate acquittal for the behavior that prompted a lengthy, divisive impeachmen­t saga.

Trump’s only apology came at the end of the hourlong speech: “I want to apologize to my family for having them have to go through a phony, rotten deal,” he said.

Harking back to the 22-month investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, Trump portrayed himself as the target of never-ending investigat­ions that, in his view, amount to little more than politicall­y motivated Democratic attacks.

“We first went through Russia, Russia, Russia. It was all bullshit,” Trump said. “We then went through the Mueller report, and they should have come back one day later. They didn’t, they came back two years later after lives were ruined, after people went bankrupt.”

He continued: “They kept it going forever because they wanted to inflict political pain on someone who had just won an election.”

Trump singled out dozens of Republican lawmakers and officials in the crowd, lavishing them with thanks, praise and jocular ribbing, underscori­ng his continued determinat­ion to keep his party unified behind him.

Rep. Mark Meadows, one of the president’s most steadfast defenders, told the president toward the end of the event that the people in the room represente­d the support he has across the country.

“We’ve got your back,” said Meadows, R-N.C.

During the first week of the impeachmen­t trial, the lead House impeachmen­t manager, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., rankled several Republican lawmakers when he referenced an anonymousl­y-sourced news report that Trump had threatened GOP lawmakers that any defections during the trial would see their “head on a pike.”

But Trump’s lengthy rewarding of those who backed him, and his expression­s of scorn for the lone GOP defector, showed that, indeed, he does value loyalty above all.

As he addressed Sen. Mike Lee, RUtah, he bristled momentaril­y about his state’s junior senator, Mitt Romney, who voted Wednesday to convict Trump on the article of impeachmen­t for abuse of office.

“A great state, Utah, where my poll numbers have gone through the roof,” Trump riffed. “And one of the senators’ poll numbers, not this one, went down big. You saw that, Mike? But

Mike is a brilliant guy.

“Say hello to the people of Utah and tell them I’m sorry about Mitt Romney,” he continued. “We can say by far that Mike Lee is the most popular senator from the state.”

While many of the president’s most ardent defenders echoed his claims that he’d done nothing wrong, several Republican­s who voted to acquit Trump did express concern about his pressure campaign in Ukraine and the withholdin­g of $391 million in military aid as he pushed the country’s new president to announce a corruption investigat­ion into former Vice President Joe Biden, a potential 2020 rival.

Some even went as far as to call the behavior inappropri­ate, even as they said they did not view it as an abuse of office that warranted impeachmen­t.

The White House had been mulling some sort of speech Wednesday following the vote, but that plan was scuttled after Romney’s surprise vote in favor of conviction on the abuse of power article denied the president the straight party-line vote he’d hoped for.

Thursday morning, Trump spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast and couldn’t hide his still simmering agitation over impeachmen­t. He held up two newspapers — “ACQUITTED!” the bold face headlines screamed — as he took the stage and immediatel­y lambasted the Democrats who led the investigat­ion of his shadow diplomacy with Ukraine and argued for his removal him from office.

 ?? YURI GRIPAS/ABACA PRESS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump and Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta face reporters Thursday before their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C.
YURI GRIPAS/ABACA PRESS U.S. President Donald Trump and Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta face reporters Thursday before their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States