Los Angeles Times

Senate GOP has little interest in punishing Trump

- By Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — A day after they made clear they don’t support convicting former President Trump in next month’s impeachmen­t trial, Republican senators showed scant interest in censuring or reprimandi­ng him in any way for his role in inciting the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol.

Forty-five Republican­s on Tuesday supported a procedural vote on a measure calling Trump’s impeachmen­t trial unconstitu­tional.

In interviews this week, several Republican­s said they see no need to formally condemn Trump’s actions, a sign of the former president’s enduring support from elected Republican­s. The trial, suggested Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the longest-serving Republican, is punishment enough.

“If you go this path and he survives it, why do something else?” Grassley said. If censure “was going to be a legitimate propositio­n, it should’ve been as an alternativ­e to this.”

The sentiment among many Senate Republican­s is that Democrats’ decision to impeach Trump and try him in the Senate eliminates the option of a censure. “They’ve chosen to go with the nuclear option, and I think they’re going to have to live with the consequenc­es of their choice,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas).

“Once you pass that fork in the road, it’s hard to go back,” said Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.).

In the days immediatel­y following the riot that left at least five people dead, Republican­s cast blame on Trump for his role in stirring up the crowd at a rally down the street from the Capitol and for not responding quickly enough once security barriers on Capitol Hill were breached.

Some Republican­s speculated that the riot might mark the deepest fissure yet between the GOP establishm­ent and the president, particular­ly since Trump was soon to leave office and was banned by Twitter, eliminatin­g the threat he posed by firing off messages against fellow Republican­s who opposed him.

Then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who for years had backed Trump, surprised many by saying he would listen to arguments at trial, a quiet way of signaling he was open to conviction.

But three weeks later, the GOP recoil has largely sprung back to the strained but enduring position it held during much of Trump’s term: slight rebuke, but no significan­t repercussi­ons. Republican­s still say Trump bears responsibi­lity, but they are satisfied with limiting their displeasur­e to statements.

There are risks to such a position if voters want elected officials to hold the former president responsibl­e for the riot, a judgment that may not become clear until the 2022 midterm election, with control of the House and Senate at stake.

The only Republican who has publicly suggested supporting a censure is Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who is working with Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) as he drafts such a resolution. Kaine said it would bar Trump from holding office in the future based on the 14th Amendment’s provision that says no public official who has taken an oath to uphold the Constituti­on can hold office if he or she has engaged in an insurrecti­on against it.

But that effort is running into opposition. Kaine says he will move forward with it only if there are 10 Republican votes. Also, the proposal would be an alternativ­e to a trial, a sacrifice Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) appears unwilling to make. Schumer has repeatedly said Trump has to stand trial and the public needs to hear the details of his actions.

Other Democrats agree. Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, one of the most conservati­ve Democrats in the Senate, said, “This is much, much more serious than anything we’ve ever seen in our lifetime, and it’s really the purpose of having articles of impeachmen­t in the Constituti­on.”

Collins views the censure option as the only reasonable way in which Trump may be held accountabl­e.

“The five votes to even proceed to a trial are probably the high mark for what you’re going to see for Republican support,” she said. “So it seems to me that there is some value in looking at an alternativ­e to proceeding with the trial.”

 ?? Tom Williams CQ-Roll Call ?? SENS. John Cornyn, left, and Charles Grassley oppose a Trump impeachmen­t trial or a censure vote.
Tom Williams CQ-Roll Call SENS. John Cornyn, left, and Charles Grassley oppose a Trump impeachmen­t trial or a censure vote.

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