San Diego Union-Tribune

CHENEY FACING BACKLASH FOR IMPEACHMEN­T VOTE

Some Republican­s call on her to resign leadership post

- BY CATIE EDMONDSON WASHINGTON Edmonson writes for The New York Times.

• A group of House Republican­s calls on Rep. Liz Cheney to resign from her leadership post.

A group of President Donald Trump’s most strident allies in the House is calling on Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the No. 3 Republican, to resign from her leadership post after she voted to impeach Trump, dramatizin­g the bitter rifts within the party and setting up a messy internal feud that could define its future.

Members of the ultraconse­rvative Freedom Caucus, including the chairman, Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, as well as Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio and Matt Gaetz of Florida, are circulatin­g a petition calling on Cheney to step down from her role as chairwoman of the House Republican Conference, arguing that her vote to impeach Trump had “brought the conference into disrepute and produced discord.”

Cheney was one of 10 Republican­s to break with the party Wednesday and vote to charge the president with “incitement of insurrecti­on” for his role in urging on a mob that stormed the Capitol.

“One of those 10 cannot be our leader,” Gaetz said in an interview on Fox News’ “Hannity” on Wednesday evening. “It is untenable, unsustaina­ble, and we need to make a leadership change.”

Cheney has brushed aside calls to step down, saying that she was “not going anywhere” and calling her break with Trump “a vote of conscience.” Several Republican­s, including some members of the Freedom Caucus, have begun to circle the wagons around her.

Others in the party who have been critics of the president have also rushed to her defense.

“Liz has more support now than she did two days ago,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, who also voted to impeach Trump. “She has gained immeasurab­le respect.”

Kinzinger suggested that it was Republican­s like Jordan who should be shoved aside in the wake of the siege and the impeachmen­t it prompted.

“Since the discussion is opened, though, we may have to also have a discussion about who in our party fomented this, and their roles as ranking members,” he said.

The debate over Cheney’s leadership post reflects the deep fractures in the Republican Party over Trump, who has demanded total loyalty from his party and, up until recently, largely received it.

While prominent figures have recoiled from Trump’s incendiary brand of politics in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 riot, worrying that it could spell ruin for their party, a large minority faction — many of them in the House — remains unwilling to abandon him. Republican­s are scrambling to determine the political consequenc­es of doing so, and whether they would pay a steeper political price for breaking with the president or for failing to.

Senate Republican­s are facing just such a dilemma as they contemplat­e how to vote in an impeachmen­t trial that could start as early as next week.

Both Reps. Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader, and Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the minority whip, voted against impeaching Trump, although McCarthy said the president bore responsibi­lity for the siege and deserved a censure.

Cheney, by contrast, had issued a scathing statement the day before the impeachmen­t vote in which she said: “There has never been a greater betrayal by a president of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constituti­on.”

But she chose not to speak during debate on the House floor. Many Democrats — who have long reviled her and her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney — quoted her approvingl­y in their own speeches.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES ?? Rep. Jamie Raskin (right) talks with Rep. Liz Cheney on Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES Rep. Jamie Raskin (right) talks with Rep. Liz Cheney on Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.

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