Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Trump impeachmen­t trial elicits memories of Capitol siege

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WASHINGTON — The impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump is more than an effort to convict the former president of inciting an insurrecti­on. It’s a chance for a public accounting and remembranc­e of the worst attack on the U.S. Capitol in 200 years.

In the month since the Jan. 6 siege by a pro-Trump mob, encouraged by his call to “fight like hell” to overturn the election, defenders of the former president say it’s time to move on.

Trump is long gone, ensconced at his Mar-a-Lago club, and Democrat Joe Biden is the new president in the White House. With the trial set to begin Tuesday, and a supermajor­ity of senators unlikely to convict him on the single charge, the question arises: Why bother?

Yet for many lawmakers who were witnesses, onlookers and survivors of that bloody day, it’s not over.

One by one, lawmakers have begun sharing personal accounts of their experience­s of that harrowing afternoon. Some were in the Capitol fleeing for safety, while others watched in disbelief from adjacent offices. They tell of hiding behind doors, arming themselves with office supplies and fearing for their lives as the rioters stalked the halls, pursued political leaders and trashed the domed icon of democracy.

“I never imagined what was coming,” said Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., recounted in a speech on the House floor.

Memory is a powerful tool, and their remembranc­es, alongside the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, will preserve a public record of the attack for the Congressio­nal Record. Five people died and more than 100 people have been arrested in a nationwide FBI roundup of alleged ringleader­s and participan­ts, a dragnet unlike many in recent times. While that is sufficient for some, assured the perpetrato­rs will be brought to justice, others say the trial will force Congress, and the country, to consider accountabi­lity.

Todd Shaw, an associate professor at University of South Carolina, said the founders envisioned a check on the presidency and the trial provides a moment that will demarcate whether American democracy makes a course correction and says “things have gone too far” — or not, he said.

“We’re in a period where a lot of Americans are very aware of that question,” he said.

Defenders of the former president are casting doubt over the legality of the impeachmen­t trial, the rationale for punishing an elected official no longer in office and the political fallout of preventing him from being elected again.

Even Republican critics of Trump, who watched in horror as he encouraged a rally mob outside the White House to make its way to the Capitol, have cooled their outrage with the passage of time and as the reality of Trump’s enduring hold on the party takes shape.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who was among those leading Trump’s charge to challenge Biden’s election, mocked the Senate impeachmen­t case as a “show trial” and waste of time. “It’s time to move on,” he said.

But Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a former prosecutor, said a trial can have a lasting effect of informing the public, regardless of the verdict or outcome.

“A public trial serves a vital purpose,“he said. “What Donald Trump mobilized and emboldened and incited is an expression of domestic terrorism that the public needs to see and understand.”

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