Call & Times

The establishm­ent proves it may still be scared of Trump

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As soon as the Senate received the lone article of impeachmen­t accusing thenPresid­ent Donald Trump of “incitement of insurrecti­on” in the Jan. 6 mob assault on the Capitol, Rand

Paul rose to object.

The Senate, he said, has no right to try a private citizen, which Trump now is. Thus, what we are about to do is flatly unconstitu­tional.

Forty-five of 50 Republican members agreed with Paul’s motion.

“This vote indicates it’s over. The trial is all over,” said Paul. “If you voted that (the Senate trial is) ... unconstitu­tional, how in the world would you ever vote to convict somebody for this?”

Consistenc­y says would not.

Susan Collins of Maine, one of five Republican­s who voted against Paul’s motion, agreed that the vote portends the final vote on conviction.

“Do the math,” Collins said. “It’s extraordin­arily unlikely the president will be convicted.”

Rand Paul may have just derailed the second impeachmen­t of Donald Trump.

Chief Justice John Roberts, the constituti­onal officer designated to preside over Senate impeachmen­t trials, has said he will not preside over this latest trial of the ex-president. With Roberts seeing no constituti­onal duty, and declining the honor, his replacemen­t as the presiding officer will be Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the longest-serving Democrat and the president pro tempore of the Senate.

But Leahy is viscerally hostile to Trump and one of a Democratic bloc that voted twice last January to convict Trump of high crimes and misdemeano­rs. How will it look to the world if this partisan is installed as both judge and juror at the trial of his political enemy? Welcome to Zimbabwe. Does the liberal establishm­ent, now back in power and controllin­g the House, Senate and presidency, not see how this is all going to look in the history books, generation­s hence?

Blinded by a hatred of Trump, enraged by the mob that stormed the Capitol, Nancy Pelosi’s House – in a rush to judgment, without hearing a single Trump witness and without letting his lawyer offer a defense – impeached, i.e., indicted, Donald Trump for “incitement of insurrecti­on.”

But how could Trump have incited the riot and the attack on the Capitol when the mob swept up the stairs before Trump finished speaking a mile away? And he would end his rally remarks by urging the crowd to march to the Hill “peacefully and patriotica­lly.”

We

have

you

subsequent­ly learned that plans and plots were being hatched days before the assault on the Capitol began.

Was the Trump White House, or Trump, privy to those plots?

In August 1974, it was a near certainty that the House would vote to impeach Richard Nixon. But after the president resigned, the House did not impeach, and Ford pardoned Nixon so the country could move on.

The rage of the establishm­ent at being deprived of its revenge against Nixon, who had turned the Silent Majority against it, not unlike today, knew no bounds. And, though history has vindicated Ford, his pardon of Nixon precipitat­ed a plunge in his poll numbers.

Half a century on, however, history says Ford did the right thing.

Why, then, are the Democrats continuing with this exercise in vengeance?

They want Trump convicted so he will be prohibited from ever again holding public office. The establishm­ent fears Trump could make a comeback, win the Republican primaries in 2024, become the nominee, and return in triumph as president.

They are determined to abort that possibilit­y. Many openly admit it.

What does that say about the liberal establishm­ent’s love of democracy when they would disqualify, in advance, the largest vote-getter their opposition party ever had, out of fear he might come back to win the presidency as he did in 2016?

“Trust the people!” was a campaign slogan made famous by George Wallace. Our national establishm­ent prattles endlessly on about its devotion to democracy, but it does not trust the people.

But the establishm­ent is going to pay a price for trying to squeeze the last ounces of juice out of this rotting fruit. President Joe Biden’s calls to unity are being drowned out by Democratic howls for a trial, conviction and banishment.

This effort to convict and disqualify Trump from running again tells us more about the people behind it than it does about Trump.

For the odds are slim at best that Trump would or could, at 78, win the nomination and the presidency a second time, as Grover Cleveland did in 1892.

Yet, a fearful establishm­ent does not want to take the chance.

For all the babbling about “democracy” we have heard in recent days, the establishm­ent wants to eliminate the possibilit­y that the people could rise up, and, horror of horrors, elect Trump once more.

You can smell the fear.

PAT BUCHANAN

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