The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Impeaching Trump is just the end of the beginning

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

When the history of the events of December 18, 2019 is written, two earlier moments will loom large.

The hinge decision was made by seven politicall­y vulnerable House Democrats in September. Veterans of service in either the military or the intelligen­ce agencies, they published a Washington Post essay endorsing the opening of an impeachmen­t inquiry.

Let’s give all of them the recognitio­n they deserve: Reps. Gil Cisneros of California, Jason Crow of Colorado, Chrissy Houlahan of Pennsylvan­ia, Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey, Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, and Abigail Spanberger and Elaine Luria of Virginia.

“The president of the United States may have used his position to pressure a foreign country into investigat­ing a political opponent, and he sought to use U.S. taxpayer dollars as leverage to do it,” they wrote. “This flagrant disregard for the law cannot stand.”

They ignored the pundit chatter that impeachmen­t would only help Trump. They insisted their “oaths to defend the country” took priority. If this meant angry town meetings and electoral defeat, so be it.

The other key date is Nov. 6, 2018, when America’s voters turned out in record numbers to elect a Democratic House majority that included Slotkin and her colleagues. Yes, health care, guns and economics mattered on that day. But it was revulsion over Trump’s many outrages that powered the surge to the polls.

Rep. Andy Kim, D-N.J., was an underdog in a Trump district when I spoke to him before the election. He sensed something special was happening. The questions that “cut through” with voters, he said then, were these: “Do you feel like there is a steady hand at the wheel? Do you feel like you’re in good hands right now?”

It was thus not surprising that despite his very narrow 2018 margin, Kim, another a national security policy veteran, announced his support for impeachmen­t. And his queries about the absence of a steady hand at the top seemed all the more appropriat­e after Trump’s unhinged letter Tuesday to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi denouncing impeachmen­t.

The president even accused Pelosi of “offending Americans of faith” by saying she prayed for him. His words would, in normal times, have embarrasse­d a talk radio host, let alone a president.

But the letter only underscore­d Trump’s determinat­ion to lie and bully his way to re-election. As a result, Wednesday’s push for impeachmen­t must be seen in light of Winston Churchill’s celebrated declaratio­n when the tide in World

War II began turning in Britain’s favor: “Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”

Which means what happens next will be decisive. Republican claims that this is a partisan process must be challenged at their core. It is partisan only because Republican politician­s lack the guts to acknowledg­e the obvious: A president who presses a foreign power to smear a domestic political opponent is engaged in despotism. Period.

So when the issue comes before the Senate, Democrats cannot back down from their leader Chuck Schumer’s demand that witnesses be called in a real trial. There is no middle ground. Either senators support a full accounting of the facts, or they are covering up for Trump.

For one sentiment in Trump’s letter was true. “The voters are wise,” he wrote. They are, and they deserve all the informatio­n that can be unearthed so they can exercise that wisdom.

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