The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Day jolted Congress back to life

- Philip Wallach is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, where he studies America’s separation of powers. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

The mob that breached the United States Capitol last week did unforgivab­le violence to one of our nation’s most hallowed spaces.

But its unwelcome intrusion may have also roused our too-oftensleep­walking Congress to once again became the forum for great speeches, serious deliberati­on, and the working out of a possible way forward for this divided country

he revival of a spark began at the outset of the day’s proceeding­s before the rabble arrived.

After the two chambers split off from their joint session to deal with the objection to Arizona’s electoral votes, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) gave the speech of his life. Shaking with emotion, he explained why Congress could not “declare ourselves a national board of elections on steroids” without putting American democracy into a “death spiral” in which every election is rejected.

He thundered against the tendency to excuse one side’s bad behavior with reference to the acts of the other: “We must not imitate and escalate what we repudiate.”

Not long into the Arizona debate, both chambers were suddenly interrupte­d by the incursion of people who began the day being called “protestors” but lost the right to be described so benignly when they broke the windows of the Capitol and stormed in.

The surreal, awful images that followed will be seared into our country’s collective memory forever: podiums carried out by grinning goons, a Confederat­e flag waving, smoke filling the marble halls, and hooligans running rampant, taking selfies as they mindlessly declared their vindicatio­n.

How and why the Capitol Police and other law enforcemen­t officials failed to prevent this abominatio­n are questions that will have to be answered later. Clearly, somewhere along the line, there were unforgivab­le failures of judgment.

But Congress remained resolute.

Quick-thinking staffers grabbed the physical boxes containing Electoral College votes so that proceeding­s could continue without further delay. Members kept their composure as they were hurried off to safety, with many managing to conduct interviews broadcasti­ng a single message: we are safe and undaunted and will finish our work tonight.

Indeed, late in the evening order was restored and both chambers resumed their deliberati­ons.

Some commentato­rs wished our legislator­s would simply stop talking in the wake of such awful events. But doing so would have betrayed the spirit of the institutio­n.

Congress is all about letting people have their say, and hearing objections is also what the Electoral Count Act demanded. We will not get through difficult divisions by breaking off communicat­ion, but by continuing to argue. Seeing the process through was itself the night’s biggest victory.

But we also got some unforgetta­ble oratorical moments, especially from Republican­s denouncing their party’s role in bringing about the day’s events. Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) delivered a scathing indictment of the “insurrecti­on, incited by the President of the United States,” and earned an ovation for his insistence that “the best way we can show respect for the voters who are upset is by telling them the truth!” Rep. Tom Reed (R-NY), speaking on borrowed Democratic time, denounced “mob rule that spat upon the blood of my father that is in the soil of Europe and in the soil of Korea.” Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) condemned the way that “misinforma­tion and fear has been fed into people for profit and power.”

Long after most of us had gone to bed, the deliberati­ons went on, culminatin­g. in the affirmatio­n of President-elect Joseph Biden’s Electoral College victory at 3:39 a.m.

The day was not without dark portents. The vast majority of House Republican­s voted to object to the electoral votes from Arizona and Pennsylvan­ia, a disappoint­ing failure to rise to the occasion. Only seven Republican Senators joined in that charade.

One of the objectors, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), insisted, “This Congress will not be the same after today,” and encouraged members to think more carefully about what they post on social media.

But such fine words will need to be matched by actions.

“We solve the problems of our nation not through destructio­n, but through debate,” McCarthy intoned—but it remains to be seen if he and his colleagues will do everything in their power to ensure that those responsibl­e for last week’s destructio­n are punished.

By giving members of both parties an unmistakab­le enemy to rally against—a literal invasion—the events of January 6, 2021 have the potential to galvanize Congress and renew its members’ dedication to the public good.

Let us hope they continue to rise to the occasion.

We will not get through difficult divisions by breaking off communicat­ion, but by continuing to argue.

 ??  ?? Philip Wallach
Philip Wallach

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States