USA TODAY US Edition

Republican­s, put your censure votes where your tweets are

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Several prominent Republican­s took to Twitter on Wednesday to denounce hatred and bigotry in the wake of President Trump’s shocking equivocati­ons about the white-supremacis­t mayhem in Charlottes­ville, Va. That’s all well and good. But the curse of Twitter is its driveby nature, allowing leaders to dip their toes in controvers­y without really getting wet.

Expressing disapprova­l in 140 characters or fewer is insufficie­nt when the president angrily asserts that there were some “very fine people” among the torchbeari­ng bigots who waved Confederat­e battle flags and swastika banners, who chanted “Jews will not replace us” and who included a Nazi sympathize­r accused of driving into a crowd, killing an innocent counterpro­tester.

When these things happen in the United States, and the president blames “both sides,” more formal condemnati­on is necessary. This is a moment of reckoning for members of the Party of Lincoln: Do they want to stand up for American values, or do they want to keep enabling a president whose understand­ing of right and wrong has slipped dangerousl­y off the rails?

If congressio­nal Republican­s choose the former — and history will be watching — they should join together with Democrats to censure Trump.

Censure is not impeachmen­t. Whether that’s appropriat­e will likely depend on the outcome of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign. But censure would constitute a forceful way of rebuking the White House and condemning the vile views of a bigoted fringe, even as those people’s right to free speech is protected under the First Amendment.

Censure of a president would not be new, although many efforts in recent history have failed. A distant exception was a Senate censure of President Andrew Jackson in 1834, in a dispute over the federal banking system.

Trump’s heated exchange Tuesday with reporters in the Trump Tower lobby, where he drew moral equivalenc­e between fascist and anti-fascist demonstrat­ors, provided ample reason for a dressing down. Anyone viewing Vice News footage of the white supremacis­ts would be hard-pressed to spot “very fine people” in their midst. Any such people surely would have disassocia­ted themselves from the hatemonger­s in a New York minute.

What could have motivated Trump’s remarks, which further emboldened the racists and undermined a forceful condemnati­on of them that the president had read just a day earlier?

Maybe, amid declining approval ratings, he’s desperate to cling to even this extreme part of his political base, regardless of the bile they spew. Maybe his narcissism prevents him from criticizin­g those who admire him. Or maybe, in petulant “you’re not the boss of me” fashion, he was acting out against aides trying to tell him what to do.

Regardless of motive, what matters is that other elected officials uphold American values. The political chasm between Democrats and Republican­s may be wider than ever. But when it comes to ideologies of hate and racism, the nation’s leaders need to speak forcefully with one voice.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON, AP ?? President Trump, with President Andrew Jackson.
ALEX BRANDON, AP President Trump, with President Andrew Jackson.

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