Los Angeles Times

An impeachmen­t opportunit­y missed

Most Republican­s put party over principle, standing by Trump even in a Capitol scarred by his mob.

- By Mark Z. Barabak

after the Sept. 11 attack, in the hollow-eyed hours that followed, there was a shining moment on the steps of the U.S. Capitol, when members of Congress, Democrat and Republican, spontaneou­sly joined in a shaky but heartfelt rendition of “God Bless America.”

It was a moment of grace, an act of defiance, a determined show of unity at a time it seemed the country, after a bitterly disputed election settled by a hair’s breadth, was hopelessly divided into warring partisan camps.

There were few such moments of transcende­nce Wednesday as lawmakers, for the first time in history, voted to impeach a president for a second time.

The proximate cause, the desecratio­n and pillaging of the Capitol by terrorists goaded by President Trump and his grievance, recollecte­d the shock of the attack on the Eastern Seaboard by terrorists who turned a f leet of jetliners into a rain of guided missiles.

The response on Wednesday, though, was drearily predictabl­e and altogether emblematic of a country where a moment like the one 20 years ago seems like a memory from a long-gone political past. When it comes to partisan antagonism, it seems there is no bottom.

With every Democrat in favor of impeachmen­t, and the ranks of Republican­s just as nearly opposed, the outcome was never in doubt. Trump’s name will be darkened forevermor­e.

That left only hours of explicatio­n, of speechifyi­ng, conducted under House

rules in the manner of a tennis match: one side serving, the other volleying in response. The result of all the back-and-forth was a recapitula­tion of the last four years and its rubbed-raw divisions. Trump as tyrant. “He is a clear and present danger to the nation that we all love,” said Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the Democrat from San Francisco. Trump as victim. “They’re kicking all of us,” said Matt Gaetz, the Republican from Florida, who remains one of Trump’s most devoted defenders.

The debate took place in a barricaded Capitol, which still bears scars of last week’s mob attack and resembled

an armed camp, with troops deployed across its marble floors to prevent further incursion. But that was seemingly lost on one Republican after another, as they rose in defense of the vengeful president.

For some, it was an opportunit­y to yet again press false claims of a stolen election, to defend gun rights, to celebrate Trump and bemoan a “double standard,” equating last summer’s protests against racism with an attempt to violently subvert the will of 81 million Americans and overturn a free and fair election.

Others used the occasion to advertise other political points. California Republican Rep. Tom McClintock of

Elk Grove wore a face covering — mandatory under House rules — that read, “This mask is as useless as our governor.”

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the QAnon Republican from Georgia, wore a black mask that read “Censored,” the contradict­ion apparently lost as she spoke to a nationwide audience of millions.

There was some acknowledg­ment — though at times grudging — of Trump’s culpabilit­y in last week’s lethal assault, his egging-on of supporters before they marched the 16 blocks down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to storm the Capitol.

“The president bears responsibi­lity for Wednesday’s

attack on Congress by mob rioters,” said House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy, his throat tightened with emotion as, for the first time, he publicly held Trump to account. The Bakersfiel­d Republican also swatted away the bogus claim that leftists in the guise of Trump supporters were responsibl­e for the violence that day.

“Some say the riots were caused by antifa,” McCarthy said. “There is absolutely no evidence of that. And conservati­ves should be the first to say so.”

He acknowledg­ed, which he previously would not, that Democrat Joe Biden had won the November election and will be properly sworn in next week as the naSoon tion’s 46th president, failing to echo Trump’s fabricated claims of a stolen election.

Still, like many of the president’s defenders, McCarthy objected to impeachmen­t on procedural grounds. Too rushed, he said. Too inflammato­ry. A bad precedent. Besides, Trump will be gone in a week, anyway.

Impeachmen­t, McCarthy went on, would only serve to further divide the nation at a time it desperatel­y needs healing. “In this country,” he solemnly stated, “we solve our disputes at the ballot box.”

Left unsaid was the fact that McCarthy, just a week ago, joined 138 Republican House members — more than half their number in the chamber — in voting to overturn the Nov. 3 election and negate Biden’s victory so Trump could illegally serve another four years.

It was a Democrat invoking the words of a Republican who showed that at least some in Congress could rise above today’s fashion of knee-jerk partisansh­ip.

Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 Democrat in the House leadership, concluded presentati­on of the case against Trump by quoting Liz Cheney, the thirdranki­ng Republican, and her fiery condemnati­on of the president.

His actions spurring the attack on lawmakers, Cheney said in a written statement Tuesday night, was the greatest “betrayal by a president of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constituti­on” in the nation’s history.

Cheney opted not to speak Wednesday. In the end, only nine other Republican­s joined her and all 222 Democrats in sanctionin­g the president for the insurrecti­on he helped spark against the very government he was elected to protect and defend.

God bless America. The country needs all the help it can get.

 ?? SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? presided over the House vote to impeach President Trump over his supporters’ assault on the Capitol — something Republican­s and Democrats who meet there should have united around.
SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images presided over the House vote to impeach President Trump over his supporters’ assault on the Capitol — something Republican­s and Democrats who meet there should have united around.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States