The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Americans want a real impeachmen­t trial in the Senate

- Gene Lyons

To hear some people tell it, House Democrats are like the dog that finally caught the car. Voting to impeach Donald Trump could turn out to be politicall­y suicidal. Essentiall­y because voters turned against Republican­s for impeaching Bill Clinton — the GOP lost five seats in the 1998 midterms, ending the political career of Speaker Newt Gingrich — convention­al wisdom assumes that Democrats will pay a similar price for acting against Trump.

It’s even been suggested that Speaker Nancy Pelosi save herself and her party by offering a motion of censure, thus surrenderi­ng to the president’s bullying, and to Senate Majority Leader

Mitch McConnell’s vow to hold a purely perfunctor­y Senate trial, calling no witnesses and rushing to a party-line acquittal.

In this formulatio­n, Pelosi becomes a political battered wife, fearful that impeachmen­t would only make her antagonist more dangerous and inflame his cultlike supporters.

Convention­al wisdom regarding impeachmen­t depends entirely upon the Clinton example. “Going back to the 1990s,” Josh Marshall points out, “the elite national press, especially in Washington, D.C., was highly, highly invested in the idea that a major scandal would and should bring Bill Clinton down.”

Whether titillated or offended, most Americans didn’t think Clinton’s sins called for impeachmen­t.

Public opinion regarding Trump is very different. The president got angry about a recent Fox News poll showing that fully 50% of Americans favor his impeachmen­t and removal.

For public consumptio­n, Mitch McConnell acts as if he and Trump have got Democrats exactly where they want them. Regarding an impeachmen­t trial, the majority leader vows to call no witnesses, subpoena no documents, and stampede the GOP Senate to a quick acquittal.

A more servile approach to his constituti­onally mandated duties would be hard to imagine. Several GOP senators have also announced that they’re prepared to ignore their oath of impartiali­ty and vote to acquit the president — Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham among them. They’re not merely willing to declare Trump a king, above and outside the law, they actually brag about it.

Anyway, what if they’re all bluffing? Can it be that McConnell, a shrewd political strategist, fully understand­s the weakness of Trump’s position? Has he actually got the 51 votes required to stage a sham trial? It would appear that they fear that a full airing of the evidence regarding Trump and Rudy Giuliani’s nutball scheme to withhold military aid from Ukraine — a democracy under attack by Russia — in order to extort its president into announcing a bogus investigat­ion of Joe Biden would hurt the party even more.

So here’s the bad news for Trumpists: With half the American public already favoring his impeachmen­t and removal, the rest expect a serious reckoning. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., supports adopting the same rules that governed Clinton’s 1999 trial — unanimousl­y approved by 100-0 vote.

According to a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll, strong majorities agree: Let’s have a real trial. Americans think Trump’s top aides should testify by a margin of 71% to 22%. “Among Democrats, 79% say Trump should let his advisers appear before the Senate, while 64% of Republican­s agree. Among independen­ts, 72% favor their appearance.”

No doubt many Trump supporters believe that the testimony of senior White House aides could only bolster his case. (Although what defendant anywhere, ever, has fought to keep exculpator­y testimony hidden?)

Trump’s removal by a twothirds Senate vote remains highly unlikely. But a proper impeachmen­t trial would serve two important purposes: to inform the public and defend the U.S. Constituti­on.

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