The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

In opposing impeachmen­t, Pelosi is trying to protect Democrats

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s, D-Calif., announceme­nt that she is “not for impeachmen­t” has caused resistance on the left. Pelosi is not trying to protect President Trump. She is trying to protect the Democratic Party from its lunatic fringe. It’s an increasing­ly difficult challenge.

Pelosi is the first House speaker in six decades to return to the job a second time. But the Democratic majority she now presides over is much different from the one she led in 2007. Since the 2018 midterm elections that gave her back the speaker’s gavel, her party has gone off the rails.

First, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., hijacked Pelosi’s agenda by announcing her Green New Deal — an upward of $90 trillion-plus miasma of government spending that proposes to provide everyone with health care, a government jobs guarantee, free education, medical leave, job training, retirement security and universal basic income to support those who, as she put in her infamous talking points, are “unwilling” to work. And that’s before we even get to the energy and environmen­tal policies.

After that troubled rollout, Pelosi tried to dismiss the plan as the “green dream or whatever they call it” and declared it “will be one of several or maybe many suggestion­s that we receive.” Pelosi favors a more modest, realistic agenda of bolstering Obamacare, lowering the cost of prescripti­on drugs, building infrastruc­ture, passing gun restrictio­ns and other convention­al Democratic priorities. But many Democrats do not share her lack of enthusiasm for full socialism. Virtually every Democratic presidenti­al candidate has some kind support for the Green New Deal, making a socialist takeover of the American economy the centerpiec­e of the Democratic Party’s agenda.

That’s bad enough. But Pelosi has also had to deal with the mess created by another leftwing insurgent, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., whose anti-Semitic remarks have exposed a virulent strain of anti-Jewish hatred that is gripping the left.

Pelosi’s next move was to try and head off a suicidal impeachmen­t drive gaining strength on her left flank. Anticipati­ng that special counsel Robert Mueller may not find incontrove­rtible evidence that Trump engaged in a criminal conspiracy with Russia to steal the 2016 election, Pelosi announced that “unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelmi­ng and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path.” That won’t stop Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., who vowed on taking office “to impeach the ...” and has announced she plans to introduce a resolution to start impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Pelosi knows that such an impeachmen­t effort would divide Democrats and might not even pass the House. And even if it did, there is zero chance that two-thirds of the Senate would vote to convict Trump for something other than a criminal conspiracy with Russia. A failed impeachmen­t would energize Trump’s base, raise Trump’s approval ratings and alienate the very suburban voters Democrats just peeled away from the GOP to win the House majority in the 2018 midterms. Most important, she knows it would distract Democrats from the agenda Pelosi wants to pursue.

During a private meeting this week, Pelosi reportedly asked House Democrats, “Do we want to drag him down or do we want to lift people up?” The answer from the Resistance is becoming clear: Drag him down!

Pelosi wants to do more than resist; she wants to govern. She wants to enact legislatio­n. To do that, Democrats need to win back the Senate and the White House in 2020.

But the Ocasio-Cortez-Omar-Tlaib wing of the party seems determined to undermine that strategy by pursuing a platform of socialism, anti-Semitism and impeachmen­t. If they prevail, not only will Trump not be impeached — he’ll also likely become a two-term president.

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