The Mercury News Weekend

Violence Trump created was sedition. He must step down

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist.

President Donald Trump incited his followers to “Fight for Trump” at a rally Wednesday morning, and they took him at his word.

When pro-Trump rioters stormed the U. S. Capitol and stopped Congress from certifying President- elect Joe Biden’s victory, the “law and order” president didn’t urge them to stand down. After all, they were just doing his bidding. He had whipped them into a frenzy with a 90-minute rant which promised that a “rigged” election would be reversed.

And after the besieged Capitol was under lockdown, with legislator­s huddled under desks, shots fired, and GOP leaders begging Trump to halt the insurrecti­onists, he released a video that only fueled the fire. “We had an election that was stolen from us,” Trump said. “But you have to go home now. … We love you. … I know how you feel.”

If anyone doubted the president was committing sedition, those doubts should be over. Donald J. Trump is underminin­g the national security of our country. He should be forced to resign.

Because let’s be clear here: The president incited this unpreceden­ted attack. Asking him politely to stop it is like asking an arsonist to put out a massive forest fire he deliberate­ly set, match by match.

Trump has been insisting for months that any election he lost would be rigged. On Wednesday, as legislator­s gathered in the Capitol, he fired up his followers on the National Mall by repeating his whole catalog of total falsehoods about fraud in swing states — lies that have been rebuffed over and over by recounts, state and federal courts, the Supreme Court and state voting officials.

“We won in a landslide,” he told the mass assembled, insisting,

“We will never give up.” Hint, hint. And they listened intently.

Trump promised that Vice President Mike Pence would refuse to certify the electoral votes at the joint session on Wednesday (where too many GOP legislator­s were ready to challenge certificat­ion in swing states — from fear of the president).

But Pence issued a statement Wednesday saying he had no constituti­onal power to reverse the election. No wonder Trump’s deluded followers were enraged.

It was just this kind of unhinged Trump behavior that impelled all 10 living U. S. secretarie­s of defense to issue a statement Sunday that the uniformed military must not be used to determine an election. I was told by one of the organizers that they feared the president might provoke violence, then use the Insurrecti­on Act to call up uniformed troops to try to retain power.

Washington, D.C.’s mayor has now had to call for the National Guard. But who knows what military fantasies Trump might entertain in the coming days.

Yet there is something Congress can do to start repairing the damage. GOP legislator­s can stop participat­ing in Trump’s continuing campaign to brainwash his base into believing the election, and Joe Biden’s presidency, are illegitima­te. They can join a bipartisan delegation to demand that Trump publicly concede defeat and demand that his followers stand down — or else step down immediatel­y.

As Biden put it to Trump on Wednesday: Go on national television “to defend the Constituti­on and demand an end to this siege. … It’s not protest. It’s insurrecti­on.”

If Trump won’t concede defeat to his base and denounce the rioters, it’s time for Pence and Congress to invoke the 25th Amendment. This is clearly a sick, if not deranged, president, who can do far more damage to our democracy if he is not blocked. If, after Wednesday’s tragedy, GOP leaders are too cowardly to act, they will go down in history as wholly complicit.

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