Los Angeles Times

An impeachmen­t divide

No, Republican­s aren’t all hypocrites. We just don’t see the issues the way the Democrats do.

- By Scott Jennings Scott Jennings is former advisor to President George W. Bush and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and a CNN contributo­r. He is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. Twitter: @ScottJenni­ngsKY

Ayear ago, it hardly seemed possible that the country could become more polarized. Then came impeachmen­t. Today, it is as if Americans are on two separate ships, facing each other across a harbor with all cannons firing, cheering when an opponent falls overboard.

To Democrats, the Trump presidency is sheer madness. To Trump supporters, that outsider’s “madness” was required to blow up Washington and deliver results.

Impeachmen­t isn’t likely to accomplish much but driving the two sides further apart. But perhaps, as the process unfolds, we should at least try to understand the motives of the other side.

With that in mind, let me try to explain the worldview of Republican­s like me when it comes to Trump’s impeachmen­t. For starters, we aren’t being willfully blind. We’re not liars or hypocrites. We haven’t abandoned our ethical standards. We do, however, have concerns about what’s driving this impeachmen­t and whether the proposed punishment fits the alleged infraction.

Republican­s believe Democrats are operating in bad faith, because impeachmen­t has been their goal since before the president was sworn in. It doesn’t help when a Democratic member of Congress is selling “Impeach the MF’er” Tshirts on her website, or that Nancy Pelosi had special “impeachmen­t pens” made to sign the documents and hand out to her colleagues.

Republican­s believe Democrats simply never got over losing the 2016 election and have been casting about since then — franticall­y, desperatel­y — for a way to make it all go away as soon as possible. Hence the obsession with Russia (he couldn’t win without their help, you know), and now the obsession with Ukraine (he can’t win again without Ukraine’s help on Joe Biden, you know).

And, I hate to break it to you, but Adam Schiff was the wrong person to lead this inquiry. After his disgracefu­l media performanc­es in the Mueller period, I can’t think of anyone less credible to a Republican than Schiff.

Another issue is the Ukraine matter itself and how to remedy it. Republican­s have varying views.

Some don’t think Trump’s actions are a big deal, while others have serious concerns about the president’s judgment, actions and choice of close associates.

But no matter where you fall on that spectrum — I find the phone call itself less than compelling, but believe deputizing Rudy Giuliani was galactical­ly bad judgment — the question is: What’s the remedy? Democrats gave Republican­s only two choices: throw the president out of office or do nothing.

Pelosi’s binary choice locked out any chance of a Republican joining Democrats’ partisan crusade to hold the president accountabl­e. Even Republican­s who are disturbed by the Ukraine issue don’t think it rises to the level of nullifying an election.

In addition, many Republican­s believe Democrats have chosen to simply dismiss facts that are inconvenie­nt. There is no doubt, for example, that Biden apparently ignored conflict-of-interest warnings from the Obama State Department about Hunter Biden’s work for a Ukrainian natural gas company. It was poor judgment all the way around from the Biden family, so much so that Joe Biden has been forced to say it won’t happen again should he win the White

House.

Republican­s wonder why Trump is being punished for raising legitimate questions about what the Bidens themselves admit was “poor judgment.”

And then there’s the matter of the Ukrainian aid. Republican­s perceive Democrats as simply ignoring the long history of administra­tions using aid to reward or punish foreign government­s for their actions. Why is Trump, they wonder, being held to higher standards than Biden himself, who bragged about withholdin­g aid from the Ukrainians in exchange for their firing a prosecutor who had been investigat­ing the company his son was working for?

And don’t get us started on Democratic attacks that Trump is acting like a rogue president by — gasp — asserting executive privilege and resisting congressio­nal oversight. He learned it from Obama. Who learned it from Bush. Who learned it from Clinton. And on and on.

Given all these things, Republican­s wonder why we can’t just settle everything in the upcoming election. You want a remedy? Let’s vote! If Americans believe the president’s actions should be punished with removal from office, they’ll soon get their chance.

For Congress to throw out a president would be unpreceden­ted, of course, since America has literally never done it. Do we really want the first time to be on an issue that has split the country down the middle, with a House impeachmen­t vote driven by only one party?

The Democratic retort is that Trump is a clear and present danger to the republic and must be removed immediatel­y, an answer blown to smithereen­s by Pelosi’s head-scratching decision to withhold the articles for several weeks.

Impeachmen­t will come and go over the next few weeks, and I am sure some as-yet-unknown revelation­s will deepen our national disagreeme­nt along the way. But no matter what side you are on — impeach or not — take heart: America’s Founders, in all their wisdom, gave us regularly scheduled ways to resolve our difference­s. Even disputes like this one.

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? U.S. HOUSE SERGEANT AT ARMS Paul Irving leads the seven House impeachmen­t managers to the Senate chamber of the U.S. Capitol last week to deliver the articles of impeachmen­t.
Alex Wong Getty Images U.S. HOUSE SERGEANT AT ARMS Paul Irving leads the seven House impeachmen­t managers to the Senate chamber of the U.S. Capitol last week to deliver the articles of impeachmen­t.

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