Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump attempted a coup and must be removed

- Robert B. Reich

Call me old-fashioned, but when the president of the United States encourages armed insurgents to breach the Capitol and threaten the physical safety of Congress in order to remain in power, I call it an attempted coup.

Last week’s rampage left five dead, including a Capitol police officer who tangled with the pro-Trump mob. We’re fortunate the carnage wasn’t greater.

That the attempted coup failed shouldn’t blind us to its significan­ce or the stain it has left on America. Nor to the importance of holding those responsibl­e fully accountabl­e.

Trump’s culpabilit­y is beyond dispute. “There’s no question the president formed the mob, the president incited the mob, the president addressed the mob. He lit the flame,” said Rep. Liz Cheney, the third-highest-ranking Republican in the House.

He should be impeached, convicted and removed from office — immediatel­y.

To let the clock run out on his presidency and allow Trump to seek the presidency again would signal that attempted coups are part of the American system. If Senate Republican­s can install a new Supreme Court justice in eight days, Trump can be removed from office within 10.

He should then be arrested and tried for inciting violence and for sedition (along with son Donald Trump Jr. and personal attorney Rudy “trial-by-combat” Giuliani).

Those who attacked the Capitol should also be prosecuted. They have no First Amendment right to try to overthrow the government.

Trump’s accomplice­s on Capitol Hill, most notably Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley, should be forced to resign. Knowing Trump’s allegation­s of voting fraud were false, Cruz and Hawley led an attempt to exclude Joe Biden electors, even after the storming of the Capitol.

The Constituti­on says that “no person shall be a Senator or Representa­tive in Congress” who “shall have engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion against” the Constituti­on, “or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.”

Cruz and Hawley are eyeing runs for the presidency in 2024. They should be barred from running.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Vice President Mike Pence finally broke with Trump, but only after remaining mute as Trump lied and bullied his way through the last eight weeks, thereby signaling agreement with his prepostero­us claims.

McConnell should also resign or be censured and stripped of committee assignment­s. Pence should be barred from any future public office.

Some administra­tion officials have already resigned in response to the attempted coup.

Yet before Jan. 6, most of them defended Trump’s antics, lavished him with praise and willingly did his dirty work. Their complicity should forever haunt their reputation­s and conscience­s.

Other accessorie­s are Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter; Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook; and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet, YouTube’s parent company.

For four years, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube have functioned as Trump’s megaphones, amplifying his every lie. When pressured to remove Trump’s fabricatio­ns about the election, they labeled them “disputed.” Twitter has now permanentl­y suspended Trump, preventing him from sending messages to his more than 88 million followers “due to the risk of further incitement for violence.” Facebook has banned him indefinite­ly. YouTube should be next.

But why did it take an attempted coup for them to act?

The hosts and producers at Fox News also share responsibi­lity for this travesty.

All are part of the ecosystem that led to Trump’s sedition. That ecosystem is still in place.

Those who say we should “look forward” to a new administra­tion and dismiss what occurred last week are delusional. Unless all who participat­ed in or abetted the attempted overthrow are held accountabl­e, it will happen again. Next time it may succeed.

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