The Mercury News Weekend

Will impeachmen­t truly drive President Donald Trump batty?

- By Gail Collins The New York Times Gail Collins is a New York Times columnist.

The only problem with impeachmen­t is that it might drive Donald Trump even crazier than usual. Or probably. The scariest thing about the whole process has been the president’s absolute, total inability to handle it like a sane person, let alone a sensible politician. On the day before the impeachmen­t vote, when reporters asked Trump if he accepted any responsibi­lity for what was happening, he did not say, “I just wish I could have been clearer about my total dedication to the country’s welfare.” He said: “No. I don’t take any.”

This was at a meeting with the president of Guatemala, during which Trump suggested that Guatemalan­s, whose country is mired in political corruption and violence, would know how to handle those House Democrats.

During the impeachmen­t debate, Republican­s howled about how the opposition was trying to turn back the results of the 2016 election. It’s true that Democrats would love to be living in a country where the woman who won the popular vote was in the White House. But, as Judiciary Committee chairman Jerry Nadler pointed out, if Trump actually did get tossed out of office, “the new president will be Mike Pence, not Hillary Clinton.”

What no one in Trump’s party admitted was that many of them would secretly love, love to replace him with a Republican who’s not nutty.

The events leading up to the House’s big day were a good example of how out of control Trump has become. He sent a loopy six-page letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, attacking her for saying, “I pray for the president.” (“It is a terrible thing you are doing but you will have to live with it, not I!”)

He forwarded the letter to members of Congress — along with the White House Christmas card. Meanwhile, a New York Times analysis found five of its claims were false, seven misleading and five exaggerate­d. Hey, nobody’s perfect.

In the impeachmen­t vote run-up, Trump also tweeted that Pelosi’s “teeth were falling out of her mouth.” We are not going to discuss the state of the speaker’s teeth, which appear to be fine. And you cannot let him pull you into this kind of rabbit hole. It’s nasty to make fun of politician­s’ personal appearance. Next thing, you’ll be talking about people’s hair and deeply artificial skin color.

Trump has constantly complained that the Democrats are treating him like a victim of the Salem witch trials. (In the House, one Georgia Republican compared the president to Jesus and the Democrats to a lesser version of Pontius Pilate.)

While the president was tweeting his wrath, the House debate went on for eight hours. Republican­s continuall­y demanded that Congress let voters make the decision about Trump’s future in 2020. Democrats warned that would give him a lot more time to mess around with the Constituti­on. “Just last week Rudy Giuliani was back at it in Ukraine, so please don’t tell us to wait, because the corruption continues,” argued Cedric Richmond of Louisiana.

It’s a good point. Trump isn’t likely to reform since he thinks everything he’s done is “perfect.” The current crisis is about stuff he’s already done. But the far scarier subtext is what he still thinks is a good idea. Like Rudy.

During the debate, the Republican­s were perhaps louder, and yelling generally works pretty well if you’re limited to two minutes. They castigated the House procedures and the Democrats’ intentions. They ranted on about everything, Nadler noted, “except a defense of President Trump’s conduct — which is indefensib­le.”

The Democrats spent a whole lot of time talking about the Founding Fathers. (“In Federalist No. 65, Alexander Hamilton wrote …”) Hamilton came up constantly. Really, somebody should write a play about him.

It was certainly a long day of speechifyi­ng. But we’re here for a major moment in American history. Stop complainin­g for a minute and take it in. Pretty awesome.

Impeachmen­t doesn’t do anything without Senate conviction. But Trump is perfectly aware of — OK, tormented by — the fact that a vote to impeach, all by itself, puts a big asterisk next to his name.

“It will follow him around for the rest of his life,” predicted California Democrat Ted Lieu during the debate.

Unless Trump does something so ungodly that being impeached will just look like a footnote. Shudder.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Paraguay’s president at the White House on Dec. 13.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Paraguay’s president at the White House on Dec. 13.

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