The Denver Post

Trump prosecutio­n is imperative after Jan. 6 committee’s work

- By Timothy L. O’brien Timothy L. O’brien is senior executive editor of Bloomberg Opinion. He is author of “Trumpnatio­n: The Art of Being the Donald.”

U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, a Wyoming Republican who may have torched her own political career by upholding the rule of law and the Constituti­on, didn’t hesitate during a Jan. 6 committee hearing last fall to identify the primary force behind the 2021 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

“The central cause of Jan. 6 was one man: Donald Trump,” she pointed out. “Our nation cannot only punish the foot soldiers who stormed our Capitol. Those who planned to overturn our election, and brought us to the point of violence, must also be accountabl­e.”

It should come as no surprise, then, that Cheney and other members of her bipartisan congressio­nal panel opted to hold the former president accountabl­e when they recommende­d in their final public hearing on Monday that the Justice Department prosecute him for a range of crimes — including insurrecti­on, obstructio­n of a federal proceeding and conspiracy to defraud the government. A 154-page summary of the committee’s findings was unsparing, and it echoed what Cheney said months ago.

“The evidence has led to an overriding and straight-forward conclusion: the central cause of January 6th was one man, former President Donald Trump, who many others followed,” the report said. “None of the events of January 6th would have happened without him.”

This is, of course, entirely true. And the Justice Department would do well to bring the full weight of the law to bear on Trump and his merry band of co-conspirato­rs and thugs. All of the hand-wringing about the political implicatio­ns of the committee’s decision — anxiety that stems as much from a clash of vastly different values as it does from concerns about fair play — can now make way for the wheels of justice.

As the indispensa­ble and instructiv­e Jan. 6 hearings made plain over the last year, the siege at the Capitol was hardly an isolated incident. It was just one facet of a premeditat­ed and sweeping attack on the pillars of democracy and was months in the making.

“Even key individual­s who worked closely with President Trump to try to overturn the 2020 election on January 6th ultimately admitted that they lacked actual evidence sufficient to change the election result, and they admitted that what they were attempting was unlawful,” the committee noted in its summary.

In service of the Jan. 6 putsch, Trump routinely insisted that the 2020 election he lost had been rigged, even though his own advisers routinely told him otherwise. He pressured his vice president, Mike Pence, to sabotage the electoral count. His lawyers filed dozens of groundless, unsuccessf­ul legal challenges to the election results that undermined public trust in the outcome. His political operatives tried submitting false elector slates as part of their attempted coup.

Trump was warned repeatedly that violence would take place at the Capitol, and he ignored the alarms. He stoked the violence in a televised speech on Jan. 6, and he was slow to do anything about the calamity once it erupted. Why would he? Weeks before Jan. 6, he tweeted an invitation to his acolytes that the committee and Justice Department investigat­ors have said ignited a groundswel­l of extremist activity focused on the electoral count at the Capitol: “Be there, will be wild!”

There are 17 findings of wrongdoing in the committee’s summary; 15 of them focus on Trump’s machinatio­ns. No Trump, no Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

Trump’s unwillingn­ess to cede power after losing the 2020 election has set a number of personal and public reckonings in motion that are equally necessary and uncertain. Trump, after all, survived two impeachmen­ts and a special counsel’s investigat­ion. Trump also regarded the presidency as a get- out- of-jailfree card, and he interprete­d the powers that Article II of the Constituti­on granted his office as absolute and monarchica­l: “I have an Article II, where I have to the right to do whatever I want as president,” he said in 2019.

It was inevitable that

Trump would bring that perspectiv­e to the Oval Office. He was born into great wealth, and his father’s resources protected him for decades from the consequenc­es of his own financial and personal debacles. He became a media and TV star, and celebrity insulated him from accountabi­lity as well. Then he landed in the White House and quickly found ways for the presidency to provide cover, too — for actions with more far-reaching and damaging repercussi­ons than any of his earlier predations.

Now Trump is mired in civil and criminal fraud investigat­ions in Georgia and New York and a federal espionage probe, among other legal actions. His company, the Trump Organizati­on, was recently convicted of tax fraud. The Justice Department has also charged about 900 people with crimes linked to the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. Attorney General Merrick Garland recently appointed a special counsel to examine both the siege and Trump’s alleged mishandlin­g of classified documents.

Sure, Trump has climbed out of quicksand before, but he’s never had such a daunting pile of existentia­l legal threats on his doorstep, either. And the Jan. 6 committee has, quite appropriat­ely, made him the centerpiec­e of any legal examinatio­n and repercussi­ons related to the insurrecti­on. Its work has made it impossible for the Justice Department, voters and Trump’s party to overlook him.

The public portion of this reckoning is also straightfo­rward: Presidents are not allowed to engineer coups, and they don’t exist beyond the reach of the law — even if they are wealthy, powerful and much beloved by their political supporters. The Supreme Court affirmed that Trump’s tax returns are likely to see the light of day for that very reason, but financial transparen­cy is just table stakes in all of this. How presidents wield the powers of their office, and the degree to which they honor democracy, are more pivotal matters.

In that context, the Jan. 6 committee’s work — and the challenges its members have placed before law enforcemen­t and voters — is as much about rooting out Trumpism as it is about calling its progenitor to account. The country is fortunate the committee rose to this occasion. Others should take up the mantle.

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