Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

GOP: ‘Don’t blame us; we’re just standing here’

- Tony Norman Tony Norman: tnorman@post-gazette.com or 412263-1631. Twitter @Tony_NormanPG.

Gruesome details of what happened at the Capitol on Jan. 6 when thousands of deranged followers of President Donald Trump attempted to disrupt the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s electoral victory continued to emerge over the weekend.

We now know about the feces that was smeared across the marbled walls and tracked across once pristine floors. We’ve heard the details about one Capitol Hill police officer beaten to death with a fire extinguish­er and we’ve seen the footage of other cops being beaten with broken flag poles by a mob that assures us that “Blue Lives Matter” — except when they don’t.

We’ve heard recordings of the chants “hang Mike Pence” and “bring us Nancy [Pelosi]” by a crowd that erected a hanging post just outside the Capitol grounds. The footage of men running around with plastic zip ties, as if they had expected to take hostages, sends chills because they came within minutes of decapitati­ng the legislativ­e branch of the U.S. government.

It is now clear that with the exception of individual acts of valor — including the officer who lured the mob away from the Senate chamber, where members were evacuating — there was a complete breakdown of security. If the bulk of the insurrecti­onists had been highly trained Jihadists instead of hyped-up QAnon crackpots, they would still be wiping the blood from the floor nearly a week later.

On Tuesday in an attempt to assign responsibi­lity for the assault on the Capitol, the House of Representa­tives introduced a resolution to impeach Donald J. Trump for the second time.

This followed a weekend in which Mr. Trump found his access to social media permanentl­y denied by two billionair­es in Southern California because of his penchant for telling lies that foment sedition and undermine American democracy.

Vice President Mike Pence also made it clear that he reserves the right to use the 25th Amendment should Mr. Trump step out of line during his remaining two weeks in office. The PGA and other bastions of corporate America are unilateral­ly canceling contracts with Mr. Trump’s companies and resorts rather than be smeared by associatio­n with the soon-to-be-impeached and probably indicted former president.

It is all an attempt to hold a man who denies responsibi­lity for anything responsibl­e for the single greatest — if incompeten­tly staged — coup in American history.

The reactions to Mr. Trump’s turn in fortune have been interestin­g to watch. Those who typically bellow loudest about personal responsibi­lity rarely show an inclinatio­n to take it.

As the latest round of “whatabout” politics proved, all the nattering about Jesus, justice and jurisprude­nce is just virtue signaling by the right wing — a way to distinguis­h itself from the socalled “woke mob” of the left.

But when it comes to mobs, “woke” or otherwise, the supporters of Donald Trump are now second to none in America’s fractured discourse. They have a body count of four supporters and one dead cop (and another by suicide) to prove it.

While sincere conservati­ves have gone into the witness protection program, most Republican elected officials haven’t been serious about personal responsibi­lity

in years.

The run-up to the Iraq War, the criminal incompeten­ce of the government’s response to Katrina and four years of the Trump administra­tion’s moral callousnes­s has all but scrubbed the terms “repentance” and “responsibi­lity” from the GOP playbook.

Pennsylvan­ia is home to a particular­ly odious brand of hypocritic­al right-wing populism and politician. Their ridiculous posturing has been especially evident during Mr. Trump’s attempt to disenfranc­hise our state’s voters and decertify Mr. Biden as the rightful winner of our 20 electoral votes.

State Sen. Doug Mastriano, one of Mr. Trump’s most loyal dog soldiers and dedicated rabble-rousers, was on the scene when the insurrecti­onists bumrushed the Capitol, but claims he and his wife left once they realized a “peaceful protest” was turning violent.

Mr. Mastriano takes no responsibi­lity for any chaos that day, despite being listed as one of the “sponsors” of the rally in online ads imploring Americans to descend on Washington to “take our country back.”

Mr. Mastriano and his friend, former GOP state lawmaker Rick Saccone, showed up in each other’s social media feed last week posing and congratula­ting each other for being on the ground floor of a Trump-inspired revolution. Mr. Saccone posted this on his social media feed: “We are storming the capitol. Our vanguard has broken thru the barricades. We will save this nation. Are u with me?”

Sounds pretty incriminat­ing by any standard, but Mr. Saccone insists he didn’t mean it literally and that he was using a metaphor to refer to peaceful demonstrat­ors breaking through barriers of liberal resistance.

When he was confronted by the media about his previous identifica­tion with the seditious Trump mob, Mr. Saccone insists, like Mr. Mastriano, that he was an innocent bystander and hardly noticed what was going on at the Capitol because he was too absorbed in the act of peacefully demonstrat­ing.

Calling it “just a figure of speech kind of thing,” Mr. Saccone doubled down and said “it shouldn’t have happened. It’s a tragedy. It’s a shame it’s being blamed on peaceful people that were there. If I knew what was going to happen, I would not have even went.”

Mr. Saccone lost his job at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, where he taught political science for two decades, because the school can’t risk being identified with an election conspiracy nut who happened to be in D.C. during an attempted coup that ended with the loss of five lives.

To call Mr. Saccone or Mr. Mastriano “liars” would be to debase the term “liar” going forward. They are worse than liars. They gave aid and comfort to those attempting to either disrupt the certificat­ion process at Mr. Trump’s behest or overthrow the government if the opportunit­y presented itself.

Mr. Saccone and Mr. Mastriano may not have smeared feces on the walls of the Capitol like their marauding cohorts, but they certainly lit a match to our Constituti­on with their false insistence that the election in Pennsylvan­ia was stolen, and that it should be overturned to benefit Mr. Trump’s fight for a second term.

Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican I’ve criticized a few times in recent years for failing to stand up to Mr. Trump, deserves credit for jumping off the crazy train by refusing to vote with many in his caucus to reject the certificat­ion of the Biden victory. In response to the coup attempt, Mr. Toomey also called on Mr. Trump to resign from office — one of the few voices in the Republican-controlled Senate to do so.

It’s interestin­g to note that despite last Wednesday’s coup attempt, eight Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s still voted to disenfranc­hise the state’s voters to benefit a seditious president who will leave office in disgrace either days sooner than planned or on Jan. 20.

Mr. Trump will never take responsibi­lity for his actions. As far as his enablers in Pennsylvan­ia are concerned, that’s fine with them.

 ?? Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette ?? Rick Saccone, who was a participan­t in the Wednesday events at the Capitol, served in the state House from 2010 until 2018.
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette Rick Saccone, who was a participan­t in the Wednesday events at the Capitol, served in the state House from 2010 until 2018.
 ?? Jason Andrew/The New York Times ?? A pro-Trump mob storms the Capitol on Jan. 6 in Washington.
Jason Andrew/The New York Times A pro-Trump mob storms the Capitol on Jan. 6 in Washington.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States