The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

We are all responsibl­e for the demise of American democracy

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

R.I.P. American democracy. You still had so much left to give! Whom should we blame for your untimely demise?

Understand­ably, many believe the coldhearte­d killer was President Trump. He has after all solicited foreign help to aid him in taking out a political rival — twice. He continues to accept payments from other foreign leaders and well-heeled business executives, who patronize his properties in clear hopes of influencin­g U.S. policy. He has refused to disclose his tax returns, necessary to determine whether the executive branch is working in his interest or the country’s. He has sought to punish perceived political enemies, minorities and other groups that dare cross him.

And so on. But is Trump truly the guilty party? In my view, he’s the wrong answer to this particular whodunit.

The real answer is more of a Murder-on-the-Orient-Expresstyp­e conclusion: We all did it.

Unindicted co-conspirato­rs in this heartless murder include Republican lawmakers. They have been led by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.), House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) and former House speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.), who tolerated massacres of civil rights, of rule of law and of other democratic values and institutio­ns, so long as the party got its federal judges or tax cuts.

They got lots of help from their colleagues. Even when those colleagues were on record as disapprovi­ng of the exact kinds of antidemocr­atic actions Trump acknowledg­es taking.

Recall that in June, Trump told ABC News’ George Stephanopo­ulos that he’d gladly accept dirt from a foreign power on a political rival, and asserted that all politician­s do so. Republican lawmakers flatly condemned Trump’s approach to such foreign-offered “oppo research” and said that they’d go to the FBI if anyone ever made such an offer.

Fast-forward to today. Now that the hypothetic­al appears to have come true, they’ve mostly fallen silent. Or worse: They’ve urged the Justice Department to investigat­e the political rival whom Trump sought a foreign power’s help in sullying, former vice president Joe Biden.

At best, you have Sen. Mitt Romney tweeting that “If the President asked or pressured Ukraine’s president to investigat­e his political rival, either directly or through his personal attorney, it would be troubling in the extreme.” Except that “if” is superfluou­s, given that Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani acknowledg­ed this way back in May.

Trump’s lickspittl­e Cabinet officials are also implicated in the Trump-coordinate­d assault on democracy.

On Sunday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo gave multiple interviews in which he suggested that Biden is the real party responsibl­e for interferin­g in U.S. elections. (Umm, what?)

Meanwhile, the media has also dropped the ball.

I don’t just mean Trump’s preferred propaganda outlet, Fox News. The rest of us have allowed the president to serve as our assignment editor. We spread his smears for him, and too often shy from coverage of any threat to democracy more technical than a tweet.

Democrats share some blame, too, feckless as they’ve been. They dragged their feet in demanding critical documents, including Trump’s tax returns. They failed to competentl­y question petulant and obstructiv­e witnesses such as former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i. And they frequently seem more interested in attacking one another than holding Trump to account.

Given all this, can you really blame voters for tuning out the onslaught on American democracy — and thereby contributi­ng to its demise? Add them to the list anyway.

Yes, Trump has repeatedly, egregiousl­y abused his power. He fired an arrow at the heart of our most cherished norms and institutio­ns. But it took the rest of us to ensure that he hit his target.

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