The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

On impeachmen­t, the worm has turned

- Dana Milbank Columnist Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

The worm has turned. For months, Democrats agonized over whether to impeach President Trump. Would it cause them to lose House seats? Would it hurt their chances of winning the Senate? Wasn’t it pointless because of the near certainty the GOP Senate wouldn’t convict him? But Trump just made the Democrats’ choice for them. He left them no alternativ­e but to proceed with impeachmen­t — and they will.

The president admitted Tuesday that he withheld congressio­nally approved military aid to Ukraine just days before a phone call with the Ukrainian president in which he demanded Ukraine produce dirt on Trump’s likeliest Democratic opponent. That, on its face, is a flagrant abuse of power and nearly identical to the behavior, denied by Trump, at the core of the Russia investigat­ion: seeking a foreign government’s help in a U.S. election.

It is the latest instance of him using the levers of government for his own political ends, to enrich himself, to reward friends and to punish opponents. This is the stuff of tin-pot dictatorsh­ips, not the United States. If the Constituti­on means anything at all, Congress must seek his removal.

Now that Democrats are pursuing an impeachmen­t inquiry, the pressure — and the quandary — shifts. The question now is whether Republican­s, who have tacitly endorsed Trump’s behavior so far, will go on record to uphold the propriety of this conduct and in doing so, affirm the constituti­onality of such behavior not just for him but for presidents to come.

Republican­s (who decided perjury about sex was impeachmen­t-worthy, and who thought it an abuse of power to defer deportatio­ns of certain illegal immigrants) must now decide whether to accept Trump’s standard as proper for future presidents. Would Republican­s, with their votes on Trump’s impeachmen­t, condone the actions of, say, future President Elizabeth Warren when she:

• Defies congressio­nal power of the purse by unilateral­ly raiding the Pentagon budget to finance her pet projects?

• Rejects the authority of congressio­nal oversight, disregards subpoenas and refuses to furnish documents, including a whistleblo­wer complaint about the president deemed “urgent” by the intelligen­ce community?

• Is found by an independen­t prosecutor appointed by her own administra­tion to have engaged in 10 possible instances of obstructio­n of justice but is not charged because regulation­s prohibit such a move against a sitting president?

• Approves and reimburses secret payments, in violation of campaign-finance law, to a person threatenin­g to put out damaging informatio­n about her?

• Fires an FBI director who refuses to call off a probe of one of her close associates?

• Rescinds the security clearance of a former CIA director critical of her, as well as the press credential­s of journalist­s who criticize her administra­tion?

• Persuades a foreign leader not to admit Republican members of Congress into his country?

• Repeatedly releases highly classified intelligen­ce, some to a foreign enemy and some only to Democrats?

• Threatens to cut off highway funds and disaster aid to states and territorie­s controlled by Republican­s, and declares she has the “absolute” right to move criminals to jurisdicti­ons governed by Republican­s?

• Funnels millions of taxpayer dollars to her own businesses, pressures federal agencies and internatio­nal organizati­ons to do business with her personal enterprise­s, invites foreign government­s to pay millions of dollars to her businesses, and rejects a law requiring her to provide Congress with her tax returns?

• Calls for a boycott of the parent company of a media outlet critical of her, threatens an antitrust action against the owner of another media outlet critical of her, says she can unilateral­ly order businesses to disinvest from a country and calls for federal punishment of individual businesses she doesn’t like?

• Offers to pardon those who commit crimes enforcing her policies, questions the authority of certain judges because they are GOP appointees and pardons a political ally who ignored court orders?

• Without congressio­nal approval, establishe­s a de facto network of internment camps, run under inhumane conditions, for a class of people she disdains?

• And, finally, asks and coerces foreign government­s to sabotage her Republican opponents’ campaigns?

Republican­s have blessed all of this and more with their silence. They must now state their positions explicitly. If they vote to accept such conduct by this and, therefore, future presidents, the American experiment will be badly damaged.

But if they aren’t at least forced to answer the question, it has already failed.

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