The Guardian (USA)

‘Cult of authoritar­ian personalit­y’: Jamie Raskin excoriates Republican party

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

The Republican party under Donald Trump has become “a cult of authoritar­ian personalit­y in league with autocrats and kleptocrat­s and dictators”, the prominent Democrat Jamie Raskin said, as the former US president saw off Nikki Haley, his last rival for the presidenti­al nomination, and finally won the support of Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the US Senate.

Raskin was a House manager in Trump’s second impeachmen­t, for inciting the attack on Congress on 6 January 2021. After Senate Republican­s ensured Trump escaped conviction, Raskin sat on the House committee that investigat­ed January 6.

“The next election wasn’t much on my mind when we were reeling from the violence and the catastroph­e of January 6,” Raskin told MSNBC, referring to the deadly riot Trump stoked in an attempt to overturn his 2020 defeat by Joe Biden.

“But I think my assumption was that of the constituti­on itself, which is that someone who participat­es in an insurrecti­on against the union should never be allowed to hold office again.

“It is disgracefu­l that a great political party, much less Abraham Lincoln’s [Republican] party, a party of liberty and union, should be reduced to a cult of authoritar­ian personalit­y in league with autocrats and kleptocrat­s and dictators all over the world.”

Of 91 criminal charges now faced by Trump, four federal and 13 state charges concern attempted election subversion. The others arise from retention of classified informatio­n (40, federal) and for hush-money payments to an adult film star (34, state).

Trump has also been handed multimilli­on-dollar fines in civil cases over his businesses and a rape allegation a judge called “substantia­lly true”, and subjected to attempts to remove him from the ballot for inciting an insurrecti­on. Regardless, he has dominated the Republican primary.

This week, the US supreme court rejected attempts to keep Trump off the ballot. In criminal court, meanwhile, Trump’s lawyers are playing for time, seeking to fend off judgment until Trump can return to power and have cases dismissed.

On Wednesday, Haley, the former South Carolina governor, bowed to the inevitable and ended her presidenti­al campaign, if without endorsing Trump.

Raskin said: “What we’ve seen in this election, and we’ll have to follow what happens with Nikki Haley, is the Republican­s break but they can’t bend. In other words, there’s no ability to accommodat­e other views because everybody has to follow Donald Trump, like a monarch.”

The Marylander also saluted “Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, the Lincoln Project and all of the Republican­s who are standing up for the constituti­on” by opposing Trump.

Cheney, from Wyoming, and Kinzinger, from Illinois, were the only Republican­s on the January 6 committee. Kinzinger retired. Cheney lost her seat.

The daughter of the former vicepresid­ent Dick Cheney and a stringent conservati­ve, Liz Cheney has resisted calls to run against Trump as a Republican or on a third-party ticket. On Wednesday, she announced a new political action committee, The Great Task.

Named for a phrase in the Gettysburg Address, the 1863 Lincoln speech that became a foundation­al American text, the group said it would support candidates for office “focused on reverence for the rule of law, respect for our constituti­on, and a recognitio­n that all citizens have a responsibi­lity to put their duty to the country above partisansh­ip”.

“The GOP has chosen,” Cheney said. “They will nominate a man who attempted to overturn an election and seize power. We have eight months to save our republic and ensure Donald Trump is never anywhere near the Oval Office again. Join me in the fight for our nation’s freedom.”

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters ?? Jamie Raskin was a House manager in Trump’s second impeachmen­t – for inciting the attack on Congress on 6 January 2021
Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters Jamie Raskin was a House manager in Trump’s second impeachmen­t – for inciting the attack on Congress on 6 January 2021

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