Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Trump’s acquittal rings hollow

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The Senate’s failure to convict former President Trump for inciting a deadly insurrecti­on is a miscarriag­e of justice. By any standard, managers from the House of Representa­tives establishe­d that he bears responsibi­lity for the violent assault on the Capitol by crazed supporters eager to stop Congress from ratifying Joe Biden’s victory in a free and fair election.

The 43 Republican senators who voted to acquit Trump — some of them hiding behind specious constituti­onal objections — have shamed themselves rather than offend Trump’s base. The Constituti­on rightly requires a supermajor­ity for conviction in an impeachmen­t trial; but the overwhelmi­ng case against Trump should have easily produced that margin.

Yet the trial was not in vain. Seven Republican senators did their duty and voted to convict, as did all 50 senators in the Democratic caucus, making it impossible for Trump and his apologists to claim that this impeachmen­t was a purely partisan exercise. The trial’s greatest value, however, was in establishi­ng for a national television audience just how great a threat Trump posed to American democracy — and might pose again.

Had the Senate convicted Trump, it could have proceeded to disqualify him from holding “any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States.” Ideally the powerful case mounted by the House will persuade voters and the Republican Party to bring about the same result.

The managers proved in devastatin­g detail that Trump incited the Jan. 6 riot, not only in his inflammato­ry speech that day, but also in his long and duplicitou­s campaign to discredit the election and cling to power. They establishe­d that rioters thought they were acting at Trump’s direction. They showed that Trump behaved as recklessly after the assault on the Capitol as he did before his supporters followed his exhortatio­n to “stop the steal.”

Finally, they made it clear that winking at and encouragin­g violence is a pattern for Trump, one that preceded his attempt to overturn the election results. As Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said: “Jan. 6 was not some unexpected radical break from his normal law-abiding and peaceful dispositio­n. This was his essential M.O. He knew that, egged on by his tweets, his lies and his promise of a ‘wild’ time in Washington to guarantee his grip on power, his most extreme followers would show up bright and early, ready to attack, ready to engage in violence, ready to ‘fight like hell’ for their hero.”

In their defense, Trump’s lawyers offered a grab bag of unconvinci­ng arguments. They engaged in whatabouti­sm (for example, by noting how Democrats have used the word “fight” when talking about their candidacie­s or their policies); made specious appeals to the 1st Amendment to excuse Trump’s fomenting; and suggested that in impeaching Trump the House was motivated by hatred for the former president rather than revulsion at the violence he incited.

Trump’s lawyers seized on a throwaway line in Trump’s speech about peaceful protest to transmute the incendiary demand to “stop the steal” at the Capitol into an appeal for ordinary political action. And they suggested, fallacious­ly, that the fact that some of the rioters may have planned violence before Trump’s speech — or showed up at the Capitol before the speech — meant that Trump couldn’t have incited others to storm the Capitol.

Fair-minded Americans — including many Trump voters — should come away from this revealing trial resolved never to allow Donald J. Trump to be treated as a legitimate participan­t in American political life, let alone be returned to the White House.

Sadly, given the polarizati­on that Trump both promoted and profited from — and a stark divide in the media landscape — many of the former president’s most fervent followers will see his acquittal as vindicatio­n of a president who was subjected by the House to “constituti­onal cancel culture.”

Nor is it clear that the Republican Party is ready to relinquish its connection with Trump. Just look at how state GOP organizati­ons have lashed out against Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and other Republican­s who voted to hold Trump accountabl­e.

A president who has been twice impeached and who manipulate­d supporters into believing his election-fraud fantasy — ultimately delivering a harangue that sent some of them to invade the Capitol — should be shunned and shamed despite this acquittal. Republican­s who voted to acquit Trump because of a supposed constituti­onal objection should be in the forefront of the effort to ostracize him from their party.

As for the millions of voters who supported Trump, they need not renounce their past allegiance to him — or their agreement with his policy positions — to recognize that he betrayed them as well when he lied about a “rigged” election and incited the mob. He is not worthy of their loyalty.

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