Morning Sun

Lock him up or bring us together?

- Cal Thomas Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

If the House January 6 committee proceeds to its seemingly predetermi­ned conclusion that Donald Trump incited the Capitol riot and tried to reverse the results of the 2020 election and if they recommend to the Department of Justice that Trump committed criminal acts and should be prosecuted, President Biden will face a serious choice.

Biden, who promised to unite the country, but who most Republican­s believe contribute­d to its division, could either allow the prosecutio­n of the former president to proceed, or travel the high road taken by President Gerald Ford when he pardoned Richard Nixon for acts associated with the Watergate scandal. If Biden chooses the former, the division will likely widen to a chasm not to be repaired for years to come. If he chooses to follow Ford’s example, he would arouse the ire of progressiv­es, but might avoid the specter I doubt most rational Americans would wish to see — a former president in court and possibly in prison. Perhaps a deal could be struck. In exchange for a pardon, Trump would agree not to run for president again.

It would be difficult for any prosecutor to convince a jury (except in heavily Democratic Washington, D.C.) that Trump caused the riot by his language. In a sound bite played by the committee, it is true that Trump did urge protesters to go down to the Capitol. True, he seemed to agree with the sign brought by one protester that said, “Hang Mike Pence,” but that is different from giving the order.

One can be disgusted by Trump’s behavior and failure even now to accept the results of the 2020 election

— I am — and still not want to see a precedent set that leads to the trial, conviction and imprisonme­nt of a former president. Not only would this add fuel to the political forest fire that is already consuming the country, it would encourage some Republican­s to do the same to a future Democratic president. Impeachmen­t and indictment­s would become a norm, not an exception.

We’ve all heard people say, “no one is above the law,” but practicall­y that is not true. There is a two-tier justice system: one for Blacks and one for whites; one for those who can afford expensive lawyers and one for those who can’t; one for legal immigrants and one for those who break the law to cross our borders; one for current and former high government officials and one for the rest of us; one for the well-connected and one for the disconnect­ed.

Those rioters who broke the law on Jan. 6, 2021, are being held accountabl­e. More than 800 have been formally charged with criminal offenses and some have gone to prison. Others await court dates. The FBI estimates that more than 2,000 people may have been involved in the attack that day.

During the 1968 campaign, there supposedly was a teenager in Ohio who held a sign as Richard Nixon’s motorcade passed by. It said, “Bring Us Together.” Nixon speechwrit­er and later New York Times columnist William Safire said he doubted the sign ever existed, but the phrase made it into the Nixon campaign. Then, and now, it is a worthy sentiment, but an unreachabl­e goal as both parties can’t agree on our problems, much less how best to solve them.

Donald Trump would do well to withdraw from the field and allow younger and less controvers­ial candidates to replace him. His record of policy successes while president are undeniable (except for those in denial), but his narcissist­ic personalit­y contribute­d to his loss. It is also contributi­ng to the work of the January 6 committee. If that committee wishes to “bring us together,” it will forgo recommenda­tions of criminal prosecutio­n and let voters decide, as they should and ultimately will, the future of Donald Trump.

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