USA TODAY International Edition

Our view: Trump's defenders set a dangerous precedent

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Watching Republican lawmakers defiantly defend President Donald Trump against impeachmen­t Wednesday, you have to conclude that they are a confident lot. Most of the world believes that Americans will someday elect a Democratic president, but apparently not today’s Republican­s.

If they did, they’d be terrified by the precedents they are setting that will make it all but impossible to restrain a future president they don’t like — perhaps even one who is as lawless and constituti­onally derelict as Trump.

This extends beyond impeachmen­t. Republican­s’ refusal to stop Trump from unilateral­ly shifting money to his border wall will empower a Democrat to follow suit, perhaps moving funds into some social program. But in impeachmen­t, they have engaged in a whole pattern of behavior that will undermine Congress’ ability to serve as a check on presidenti­al overreach.

They did so with the House impeachmen­t inquiry by countenanc­ing Trump’s stonewalli­ng of requests for documents and witnesses. This will make it far more difficult for them to mount the kind of charged investigat­ions that have been their hallmark.

In the Obama administra­tion, Republican­s investigat­ed the tragic attack on a U. S. compound in Benghazi, Libya; Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of State; the IRS scrutiny of conservati­ve nonprofits; and a controvers­ial and failed program that involved straw purchases of firearms in an effort to infiltrate Mexican gangs.

Now it’s hard to imagine inquiries like these getting much cooperatio­n from a Democratic administra­tion.

Republican­s have also stood by while this administra­tion politicize­d the office of the attorney general, using it to undermine the work of career prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t officers who reach conclusion­s that are embarrassi­ng or damaging to Trump.

They have, furthermor­e, amplified his conspiracy theories, most notably that Ukraine, rather than being a victim of Trump’s misuses of office, is actually a sinister nation and that it — rather than Russia — interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

With impeachmen­t heading to the Senate, all signs are that the Republican­s there will follow suit. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has already signaled that he will work with the White House to limit witnesses and frame the debate in ways designed to help Trump. “I’m not trying to pretend to be a fair juror,” said Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham.

Stop to think about that for a moment: the Senate jurors, who will be sworn to impartiali­ty, are colluding with the defense lawyers to help ensure a favorable outcome at trial.

Future Democratic presidents will look at this behavior and expect it of their own party, giving them a sense of invincibil­ity. The actions of Trump’s GOP enablers aren’t good for the rule of law or constituti­onal government. Nor will they be good for the GOP of the future, when the tables inevitably turn.

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Protest in New York on Tuesday.
STEPHANIE KEITH/ GETTY IMAGES Protest in New York on Tuesday.

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