The Mercury News

When Democrats play defense while Republican­s play offense

- By Kurt Bardella

The question I get asked the most as someone who went from being a Republican to a Democrat is: “What's the biggest difference between the two parties?”

The answer: Every impulse Democrats have is defensive and every impulse Republican­s have is offensive.

A report in The Washington Post last week showed these dynamics at play perfectly between Democrats and Republican­s on the January 6th Select Committee. As The Post described, Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy of Florida insisted that the committee focus less on former President Donald Trump and more on the security and intelligen­ce failures that allowed the attack on the Capitol. In response, Republican Vice Chair Liz Cheney of Wyoming argued that the committee should keep its focus on the former president.

This is the best illustrati­on I have come across that demonstrat­es how different Republican­s and Democrats approach things on a tactical and, I'd say, cellular level.

When Republican­s have the reins of power, they do not hesitate to go after the very top. From Barack Obama's birth certificat­e to Hillary Clinton's emails and potentiall­y Hunter Biden's laptop, the GOP is unapologet­ic about pursuing witch hunts for political gain.

Democrats, on the other hand, are always pursuing lines of legitimate oversight reluctantl­y. At times, it feels like they are apologizin­g for doing the right thing.

I think back to Trump's first impeachmen­t and the hesitant posture displayed by the Democrats during those proceeding­s. It was almost as if they were forced into it, regretted that it came to this, and moved as fast as possible to get it over with.

Democrats controlled the House majority but never forced Trump administra­tion officials with firsthand knowledge of the events that were at the center of the impeachmen­t inquiry to testify such as John Bolton, Mick Mulvaney or Rick Perry, and the Republican-controlled Senate predictabl­y torpedoed any effort to compel them to testify.

History repeated itself during Trump's second impeachmen­t as firsthand witnesses like Mike Pence, Mark Meadows, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, Rudy Giuliani, etc., were never called to testify. Hillary Clinton, of course, was grilled by the Republican-led Benghazi Committee for more than 11 hours.

It's almost as if Democrats believe there is some prize awaiting them for showing what they would characteri­ze as restraint. There isn't.

Some Democrats might think that if they pushed for certain investigat­ive inquiries, that would give Republican­s license to seek retributio­n should they regain power after the midterms this November. Newsflash: They are going to do that anyway.

Understand that if the GOP gets back the power of the gavel, they are going to unleash an investigat­ive tsunami against Democrats and the Biden administra­tion that'll make the Benghazi circus look like a walk in the park. They will not show any hesitancy or restraint. They will not worry about looking partisan or responsibl­e. They certainly won't care about facts and the truth.

Democracy itself is under siege from the Republican Party. Democrats may have just a few months left — if control of the House flips in the midterms — to protect and defend our democratic process.

They should use every single tool of congressio­nal power to hold the leaders of the Jan. 6 domestic terrorist attack accountabl­e. They should use the visibility of a congressio­nal hearing to put on display the full measure of lunacy and absurdity that have hijacked the Republican Party. They should invoke inherent contempt against anyone who refuses to comply with the committee's subpoenas so that anyone who refuses to testify before the committee is thrown in jail by the House sergeant at arms.

They should do what the Republican­s would do given a chance: refuse to compromise and go on the attack. This difference, of course, is that the Democrats are going after the insurrecti­onist machine and defending democracy while the GOP is tearing it down.

Kurt Bardella is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. He is an adviser to both the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee and a former senior adviser for Republican­s on the House Oversight Committee. © 2022 Tribune Content Agency.

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