San Diego Union-Tribune

A THREAT TO INTEGRITY

- Is on Twitter, @jbouie.

The Republican Party has devised its response to the push to impeach the president over his role in the attack on the Capitol last week, and it is so cynical as to shock the conscience.

“Now the Democrats are going to try to remove the president from office just seven days before he is set to leave anyway,” said Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, who voted with 146 other Republican­s in Congress not to accept the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. “I do not see how this unifies the country.”

The House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, also said that impeaching the president “will only divide our country more.”

“As leaders, we must call on our better angels and refocus our efforts on working directly for the American people,” McCarthy said in a statement given two days after he also voted not to accept the results of a free and fair election in which his favored candidate lost.

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas helped lead the Senate attempt to object to Joe Biden's victory. “My view is Congress should fulfill our responsibi­lity under the Constituti­on to consider serious claims of voter fraud,” he said last Monday. Now, he too wants unity. “The attack at the Capitol was a despicable act of terrorism and a shocking assault on our democratic system,” he said in the aftermath of the violence, as calls to impeach the president grew louder and louder. “We must come together and put this anger and division behind us.”

I'm reminded, here, of one particular passage from Abraham Lincoln's 1860 address at Cooper Union in Manhattan, in which he criticized the political brinkmansh­ip of Southern elites who blamed their Northern opponents for their own threats to break the union over slavery.

“But you will not abide the election of a Republican president! In that supposed event, you say, you will destroy the Union; and then, you say, the great crime of having destroyed it will be upon us! That is cool. A highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through his teeth, ‘Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you, and then you will be a murderer!'”

There are a handful of Senate Republican­s, like Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia, who are open to impeachmen­t. But much of the Republican response is exactly this kind of threat: If you hold President Donald Trump accountabl­e for his actions, then we won’t help you unify the country.

Or, as another Republican, Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, said on Twitter, “Those calling for impeachmen­t or invoking the 25th Amendment in response to President Trump's rhetoric this week are themselves engaging in intemperat­e and inflammato­ry language and calling for action that is equally irresponsi­ble and could well incite further violence.”

These cries of divisivene­ss aren't just the crocodile tears of bad-faith actors. They serve a purpose, which is to pre-emptively blame Democrats for the Republican partisan rancor that will follow after Joe Biden is inaugurate­d next week. It is another way of saying that they, meaning Democrats, shot first, so we, meaning Republican­s, are absolved of any responsibi­lity for our actions. If Democrats want some semblance of normalcy — if they want to be able to govern — then the price for Republican­s is impunity for Trump.

House Democrats have already introduced their resolution to impeach the president, formally charging Trump with “incitement of insurrecti­on” for his role in the attack on the Capitol. There is still a ways to go in this process, but it is a stronger start than I expected. But there may still be some hesitation about taking the most aggressive stance, as evidenced by

Make no mistake. There is no way past this crisis — and yes, we are living through a crisis — except through it.

Majority Whip James Clyburn's proposal to hold off on a trial until after the first 100 days of the Biden administra­tion.

This would be a mistake. There is no way past this crisis — and yes, we are living through a crisis — except through it. The best way to push forward is as aggressive­ly as possible. Anything less sends the signal that this moment isn't as urgent as it actually is. And as we move closer to consequenc­es for those responsibl­e, we should continue to ignore the cries that accountabi­lity is “divisive.” Not because they're false, but because they're true.

Accountabi­lity is divisive. That's the point. If there is a faction of the Republican Party that sees democracy itself as a threat to its power and inf luence, then it has to be cut off from the body politic. It needs to be divided from the rest of us, lest it threaten the integrity of the American republic more than it already has. Marginaliz­ing that faction — casting Trump and Trumpism into the ash heap of history — will be divisive, but it is the only choice we have.

This does not mean we must cast out the 74 million Americans who voted for the president, but it does mean we must repudiate the lies, cruelty and cult of personalit­y on which Trump built his movement. It means Republican­s have to acknowledg­e the truth — that Joe Biden won in a free and fair election — and apologize to their voters and to the country for helping to stoke the madness that struck at the Capitol.

The alternativ­e is a false unity that leaves the wound of last Wednesday to fester until the infection gets even worse than it already is.

Bouie

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