Chicago Sun-Times

Rahm to Dems: Forget about impeachmen­t

Mayor admits anger at Trump, says president’s actions aren’t at level of removal from office

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@ suntimes. com | @ fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Monday he “couldn’t be angrier” at President Donald Trump, but that doesn’t mean it’s time for his fellow Democrats to talk about impeachmen­t.

The almighty “I” word — and the perils of impeachmen­t for Democrats pushing the envelope before it’s time — came up during a conversati­on hosted by Axios and the U. S. Conference of Mayors on the impact of innovation and automation on cities.

Axios Executive Editor Mike Allen asked Emanuel whether impeachmen­t was a “good issue” for the mayor’s fellow Democrats to use against Trump.

“This is a serious legal and consequent­ial, non- political issue. And my view is, there’s nothing there today that we know” that rises to that standard, Emanuel said.

“I couldn’t be angrier at Donald Trump. . . . I can’t be angrier about how he uses ‘ other’ to organize his base — anybody who doesn’t look and act like us,” Emanuel said. “I’m angry at what he’s done. But [ impeachmen­t] is a legal, constituti­onal standard. When we get to it, we collective­ly as a country will know it— as we did with Richard Nixon.”

Emanuel was a brash young staffer working under former President Bill Clinton when Clinton was impeached by the U. S. House of Representa­tives after the Monica Lewinsky scandal but not convicted by the U. S. Senate.

The mayor never-mentioned that in his recitation of impeachmen­t history that included former President Andrew Johnson, whom Emanuel initially identified as James Buchanan before correcting himself.

Tulsa Mayor G. T. Bynum, a Republican, offered a dramatical­ly different view of Trump, particular­ly when it comes to the president’s passion for tweeting.

Bynum acknowledg­ed he has a special alert set up on his cellphone that lets him know immediatel­y when Trump sends out a tweet.

“I’m a huge history buff. And if you set aside all of the partisansh­ip and everything else, it is pretty cool to live at a time when many of the thoughts that are running through a president of the United States’ head on a daily basis, you have instant access” to, Bynum said.

As the audience dissolved into derisive laughter, Bynum added: “It’s true. Imagine what history would be like if Thomas Jefferson [ had been tweeting]. I like the transparen­cy of it.”

Allen replied: “It’s not every day that the president is compared to Thomas Jefferson.”

 ?? SAULLOEB/ AFP/ GETTY ?? President Donald Trump
SAULLOEB/ AFP/ GETTY President Donald Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States