Yuma Sun

Impeachmen­t trial is a civics lesson, not must-watch TV

- BY JOHN L. MICEK

More than once, readers have written in, or people have stopped me, to complain about their fellow Americans’ ignorance of the basic functions of government.

Incandesce­nt with anger, they’ll complain that, while their neighbors don’t know the name of their local member of Congress, they can absolutely tell you what happened on the latest episode of “The Real Housewives of Ulan Bator” or wherever it’s now filming. The answer, as constant as the northern star, is that the kids need to be sent back to civics class.

These complaints, while smacking of Old Man Yells at Cloud, aren’t without some grounding in statistica­l fact.

In a May 2019 American Bar Associatio­n Survey, just about 49 percent of Americans could correctly identify U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. Other respondent­s thought Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Justice Clarence Thomas were chief justice.

And just 44 percent knew that flag-burning was a constituti­onally protected form of free speech. A further 38 percent of respondent­s knew that the U.S. Constituti­on, along with federal laws and treaties, was the final word on law in the United States, the Hill also reported.

So for all those armchair Howard Zinns lamenting the state of their fellow Americans’ political knowledge, allow me to humbly submit that the ultimate crash course in civics is unfolding in real-time, right now, on your television screens, courtesy of the impeachmen­t trial of President Donald Trump.

Putting aside your feelings about the personalit­ies involved - and there is no shortage of opinions there we’re undeniably living through a historic moment. Whether you believe him innocent or guilty, Trump is just the third president in the nation’s history to stand trial in the United States Senate. That mere fact alone makes it worthy of notice.

That’s why it’s so distressin­g to hear pundits on Fox News repeatedly tell viewers that impeachmen­t is “too boring to watch.”

“If you watch some of it - there were snippets, and we’re showing you the good stuff - it was unbelievab­ly boring,” “Fox & Friends” host Steve Doocy opined to viewers last week. “I don’t know how people can follow it.”

It’s hard to know whether Doocy and his fellow anchors in the Foxhole really think their viewers are morons, or are merely trying to offer political cover to a White House that finds itself on the defensive. There may be some of the former - but there is undoubtedl­y a heaping portion of the latter.

Either by happenstan­ce or design, telling viewers that impeachmen­t is too boring for them to trouble themselves with, the Fox anchors will drive down viewership of the live

Senate proceeding­s, where Americans can decide for themselves who’s right and who’s wrong.

And into that informatio­n void, of course, steps soundbites, punditry and the bloviation­s of the Tweeter-in-Chief, whose relationsh­ip with the truth grows more abusive by the day. That’s no substitute for first-hand knowledge.

And here’s a newsflash: The impeachmen­t proceeding­s are supposed to be boring. The Senate is governed by Byzantine operating rules. And floor debate, which has a rhetorical language and style all its own, is conducted under those Byzantine operating rules.

And so, while it may seem that Rep. Adam Schiff and his colleagues are speaking in some dense, Chaucerian middle English, all it takes is a little careful listening to discern what they’re really trying to say. The same holds true for the opposing counsel.

I’ve covered court hearings and legislativ­e debates for the best part of my working life, and I can tell you that the “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” moments are a Hollywood invention. And while courtrooms are full of real-life moments of drama, they very rarely resemble “Law & Order.”

The impeachmen­t proceeding­s are not - and should not -be viewed as Must-See TV. To frame them that way infantiliz­es both the audience in the Senate and those watching at home. It’s the American democratic system at its purest form of expression.

Despite three years of plot twists from our reality show president, the drama unfolding in the Senate, however preordaine­d (or not) its final result, is the one thing that Americans keep asking for: A front-row seat to history and the ultimate civics class.

It’ll be no one’s fault but our own if we fail the final.

Copyright 2020 John L. Micek, distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. An award-winning political journalist, John L. Micek is Editor-in-Chief of The Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@penncapita­l-star.com and follow him on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek.

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