The Mercury News

What do Republican­s see when they look in mirror?

- By Martin Schram Martin Schram is a columnist for Tribune News Service. © 2022 Tribune Content Agency.

It is yet another morning after. But as you stare at your bathroom mirror, on this Wednesday morning after Tuesday's hearing, it somehow feels as if you are staring at just another news screen. And this one just keeps looping more bad news.

You've always been proud to call yourself one of our 45th president's MAGA Trumpers. You are, of course, the face and politics of that person in your mirror. It is you, a proud Trump enabler.

But the more you stare at the face in the mirror, the more it seems to morph into that other face you saw on your news screen Tuesday and came to admire more than you dare to admit. It was the face of the young woman who seemed to be singlehand­edly rewriting JFK's Pulitzer-winning “Profiles in Courage” as she testified before the House hearing on the horrific events of Jan. 6, 2021. She soon seemed far more mature, more patriotic than the panicky much older men who were her bosses: President Donald Trump, his chief of staff Mark Meadows and deputy chief of staff Anthony Ornato.

At first, you reflexivel­y hated what she was saying. But you could see she was telling tough truths about all she witnessed during and after the horror of the violent occupation of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

But as you kept staring at your own troubled face in your bathroom mirror this past Wednesday morning, you suddenly realized you no longer felt proud to be known as a Trump enabler. Your mind's eye kept seeing reruns of 26-year-old Cassidy Hutchinson's straightta­lk testimony.

She told us she'd heard the president's men saying that enforcemen­t officers reported pro-Trump protesters were armed with more than a few AR-15s, Glock-style pistols, bear spray, body armor, spears and flagpoles topped with spears. Secret Service was using magnetomet­ers to screen the crowd for weapons. But thousands were refusing to go through the screening. And that made Trump “furious,” Hutchinson testified. He wanted everyone to be let into the Ellipse with their weapons — and then wanted them to be allowed to take their weapons to the Capitol. (And we know that, once there, the crowd smashed windows and doors, bashed woefully outnumbere­d police and overran the Capitol.)

Your mind keeps replaying Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony about her president's willingnes­s to send protesters with weapons to try to halt Congress' electoral certificat­ion of his defeat: “He was furious. … I overheard the president say something to the effect of … `I don't effing care that they have weapons. They're not here to hurt me. Take that effing mags away. Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in. Take the effing mags away.”

It became shattering­ly clear to Cassidy Hutchinson that the president she admired and enabled didn't give a rodent's patootie about just who would become the victims of those thousands of armed pro-Trumpers after they reached and breached the U.S. Capitol. Where do you stand?

Fast forward to Wednesday night: Once again, you are staring into your bathroom mirror; and once again, it has become your news screen. You are hearing reruns of the latest breaking news. Yet another courageous conservati­ve Republican woman, Rep. Liz Cheney, just spoke in Simi Valley to a sizable crowd at the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Foundation & Institute. As Cheney recounted the week's revelation­s, she stood in front of a huge blue backdrop that proclaimed in white letters: “A TIME FOR CHOOSING.”

“We have to choose,” Cheney said. “Because Republican­s cannot both be loyal to Donald Trump and loyal to the Constituti­on.” Suddenly the large audience interrupte­d her with loud applause.

So now, you are not just staring into your bathroom mirror, you are talking to it. You are asking that face you have known all your life whether you both have the guts to finally make that public, patriotic choice: Are you finally ready to stand and applaud Cassidy Hutchinson and Liz Cheney?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States