Medicine Hat News

U.S. UNREST – Trudeau says Trump incited riot

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON, D.C. Aftershock­s shuddered through America’s political and cultural bedrock again Friday as shaken lawmakers forged ahead with plans to make Donald Trump the first U.S. president to be impeached a second time.

The ongoing implosion of the Trump presidency, less than two weeks from expiring of its own accord, has been steadily accelerati­ng over the course of the 48 hours since Wednesday’s shocking siege of Capitol Hill.

Even Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who over the course of the last four years has studiously avoided calling out the president by name, stopped pulling his punches.

“What we witnessed was an assault on democracy by violent rioters, incited by the current president and other politician­s,” Trudeau said in a prepared statement during a news conference outside his Rideau Cottage residence.

“As shocking, deeply disturbing, and frankly saddening as that event remains - we have also seen this week that democracy is resilient in America, our closest ally and neighbour.

“Violence has no place in our societies, and extremists will not succeed in overruling the will of the people.”

Trump’s tenure as commander-in-chief hit its lowest point to date Wednesday when waves of angry supporters, fuelled by his persistent but fictional claims of a stolen election and exhortatio­ns to fight back, stormed up the steps of the Capitol.

They muscled their way past a meagre police presence and unleashed anarchy - smashing windows, upturning offices, desecratin­g monuments and terrorizin­g members of Congress. Five people died, including a Capitol police officer.

More than 24 hours later, Trump — seemingly chastened by the blast wave of outrage that ensued, including from his own staff and cabinet — acknowledg­ed his defeat and promised a peaceful transition, infuriatin­g some of his most fervent backers.

In online forums, users who typically preach loyalty to Trump abruptly changed their tune, calling the president’s statement “the final betrayal” and a “punch in the gut.”

Canada is not immune to the destabiliz­ing forces that have brought the United States to the brink, Trudeau said as he urged Canadians to keep vigilant against the ever-present perils that might seek to undermine it.

Political leaders, he said, must always represent all of their constituen­ts regardless of partisan stripe, and resist the temptation to engage in divisive, explosive rhetoric.

“We have a responsibi­lity as Canadians to continue to lead with respect, to engage substantia­lly with different points of view and to never resort to violence as a way of impacting public discourse,” Trudeau said.

“The choices we make as leaders, as politician­s, have consequenc­es. What we choose to say, what we choose not to say, how we choose to say it does have an impact on Canadians.”

Trudeau’s remarks drew mixed reviews in Canada.

The prime minister went too far, said Colin Robertson, a former Canadian diplomat with extensive experience in U.S. political circles. Republican­s still have plenty of political power, even without control of the White House or the legislativ­e branch.

“I don’t see how the latest remarks win us any points with the Biden team, and it is only going to confirm the Trumpists’ view that he’s ‘two-faced’ and can’t resist virtue-signalling.”

But after the storming of the Capitol, what little respect Trump retained is now gone, said Bessma Momani, an internatio­nal affairs expert at the University of Waterloo.

“I doubt the president could enact any punitive actions against Canada in these remaining 12 days.”

America’s vaporous political atmosphere has some in the

U.S. worried that a late-day impeachmen­t proceeding risks rekindling the country’s feverpitch tensions - particular­ly with a presidenti­al inaugurati­on 12 days away.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi feels differentl­y: “This unhinged president could not be more dangerous,” she reportedly told Democrats on a conference call Friday.

Democratic leaders have been urging Vice-President Mike Pence to invoke a constituti­onal amendment that gives him and the federal cabinet the power to remove a president. Pelosi has promised impeachmen­t proceeding­s if that doesn’t happen.

“From a political perspectiv­e, clearly, Trump went way too far,” said Eric Miller, a

Canada-U. S. expert and president of the Rideau Potomac Strategy Group in Washington.

“(But) from an institutio­nal perspectiv­e, in a constituti­onal republic, if one does not respect the basics of laws and the constituti­on and due process, then everybody is in deeper trouble.”

The decision of whether or not to launch impeachmen­t proceeding­s, which some reports indicate could begin as soon as Monday, is for Congress to make on its own, said president-elect Joe Biden.

Biden refused to say whether he would support such an effort. He did say, however, that he hopes Congress is ready to hit the ground running once he’s inaugurate­d on Jan. 20.

“He is not fit to serve — he is one of the most incompeten­t presidents in the history of the United States of America,” Biden said.

“I think it’s important that we get on with business. Getting him out of office - the quickest way that will happen is us being sworn in on the 20th.”

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Donald Trump

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