The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Impeachmen­t summer? Town halls may decide Democrats’ next steps

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WASHINGTON — Freshman Democratic Rep. Andy Kim came face to face with impeachmen­t fervor at a town hall in New Jersey. “Do your job!” shouted one voter.

Several states away, a woman held up a copy of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report and told freshman Rep. Elissa Slotkin at a Michigan town hall she hoped she would “be the person that puts us over the top to start an impeachmen­t inquiry.”

And in Virginia, newcomer Rep. Abigail Spanberger encountere­d voters with questions, if not resolve, about impeaching President Donald Trump.

“I don’t have blood dripping from my fangs for or against impeachmen­t,” said David Sussan, 70, a retired postal inspector from Chesterfie­ld, who favors starting an inquiry. “I just want the truth to come out.”

It’s these freshman lawmakers, and others like them, who will likely decide when, if ever, House Democrats start formal efforts to impeach the president.

Neither Kim, nor Slotkin, nor Spanberger supports impeachmen­t. But with half the House Democrats now in favor of beginning an inquiry, the pressure will only mount on the holdouts to reach a tipping point. And with lawmakers returning home to voters during the August recess, what happens next may prove pivotal.

The proimpeach­ment group Need to Impeach is running television ads. Along with activists from other groups, it’s also fanning out to congressio­nal districts to push lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, to move more swiftly toward impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

The organizati­on’s lead strategist, Kevin Mack, says his counsel to lawmakers, especially those new freshmen who took over formerly Republican­held seats, is to ignore the campaign consultant­s and party strategist­s, and “do what you think is right” about Trump.

“You can’t really make the argument he’s the most corrupt president in American history and not hold him accountabl­e,” he said. “Either you think what he’s doing is OK or you hold him accountabl­e.”

For lawmakers, though, the calculus is not so simple. Voters in many of these districts helped elect Trump in 2016, but flipped to give Democrats control of the House in last year’s election. Many of the firstterm Democrats already face challenger­s for 2020 and are trying to balance the divergent views in their districts. While some voters want impeachmen­t, others have different priorities.

New Jersey lawmaker Kim, a former national security official, told some 80 voters at a town hall in Riverside to remain evenkeeled and to trust in the investigat­ive process that House Democrats are pursuing.

“I don’t think getting caught up in the knife fighting and name calling is going help us get out of this pit,” Kim said.

That caused some from the crowd to retort that pursuing impeachmen­t wasn’t “knife fighting” but part of the Constituti­on.

“Just do the investigat­ion into impeachmen­t,” said Marianne Clemente, of Barnegat. “Just so that we’re doing something” to show Trump he’ll be held accountabl­e, she said. “If we let him get away with this, we can kiss our democracy goodbye.”

Some of the loudest applause from the audience came when one constituen­t stood up and said Trump was “destroying our country.”

Another voter said the congressma­n’s focus on other issues, like health care, was like “cutting the grass while the house is on fire.”

In Spanberger’s Virginia district over the past week, she, too, fielded several questions about her stand on the impeachmen­t inquiry as she crisscross­ed the region for town halls.

When she was asked about it in Culpeper, Spanberger told voters that she helped block an impeachmen­t bill based on Trump’s racism because she did not believe that qualifies as “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” set out by the Constituti­on.

“My opinion and stance has long been that I believe in facts and evidence,” she said. “As long as the investigat­ions are continuing, and we see my colleagues are continuing to gather informatio­n, I am watching very closely.”

Democrat Ron Artis, a retiree, seemed satisfied with the new congresswo­man’s approach.

“If she was to come out without having enough people behind her, that stuff is suicidal,” he said.

And when Michigan lawmaker Slotkin faced the questioner armed with Mueller’s report, she told those gathered at the store in Mason about two recent moves by House Democrats that she sees as important — the special counsel’s testimony and House subpoenas of the Trump administra­tion.

“I’m open to where this goes,” Slotkin said. “But I think that it is important that we do it in a way that communicat­es clearly what we are intending. And we do it in a way that doesn’t forget about the other part of our job, which is to legislate.”

One of those attending the event, Army veteran Joshua Johnson, 41, of Webbervill­e, expressed some skepticism about impeachmen­t and said Congress should keep investigat­ing.

“I don’t know that impeaching the president is going to be a good thing,” he said. He worries the 2020 election is right around the corner, and any impeachmen­t proceeding won’t get done “in time to make a difference.”

He added, “I think it might hurt more than it helps. … It probably splits people worse.”

Pelosi has made it clear she has no plans to press toward impeachmen­t without a groundswel­l of support on and off Capitol Hill.

The speaker, who was herself a newer congresswo­man during Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t and rejected calls to impeach George W. Bush during her first speakershi­p, is not eager for Democrats to take on such a politicall­y, emotionall­y fraught issue alone.

So far, Pelosi’s effort to cater to the frontline freshmen appears to be holding House Democrats in line. Even though she gave lawmakers a greenlight after Mueller’s testimony to speak their minds on impeachmen­t, and dozens of lawmakers announced their support for starting an inquiry, it’s still nowhere near the 218 votes Pelosi would need to pass legislatio­n in the House.

The holdouts will likely determine what Pelosi does next.

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