The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Slow-walking impeachmen­t may look weak, but restraint shows strength

- Columnist

There was only one side of the dais at Tuesday’s House Judiciary Committee hearing that mentioned impeachmen­t — and it wasn’t the Democratic side.

There was only one side that hollered and sputtered, one side that lobbed insults at the other and impugned colleagues’ motives — and it wasn’t the majority.

Indeed, Tuesday’s hearing was a study in the asymmetric combat that defines our politics in the Trump era. Some on the left see this asymmetry as a sign of Democratic weakness. I see it as the nation’s best hope for recovery.

At Tuesday’s session, the committee’s chairman, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., spoke in a calm, steady voice about the absence of former White House counsel Donald McGahn, a no-show after President Trump ordered him not to comply with a subpoena. “Mr. McGahn has a legal obligation to be here for this scheduled appearance. If he does not immediatel­y correct his mistake, this committee will have no choice but to enforce the subpoena against him,” Nadler intoned.

Nadler mentioned neither impeachmen­t nor contempt, and he managed to keep the Democratic side — including the gadfly who brought fried chicken to a previous hearing as a prop — quiet.

Then came Nadler’s Republican counterpar­t, Rep. Douglas Collins of Georgia, who practicall­y yelled out his statement and fired off taunts so quickly that those of us in the room struggled to understand him, and the transcript designated several sections as unintellig­ible. The words that did come through were mostly caustic and personal.

Watching this disparity in demeanor, I tried to imagine how things might look if Hillary Clinton had won the presidency, and, two years later:

— Five of her campaign advisers had been convicted of crimes and a sixth indicted.

— A prosecutor documented numerous instances in which Clinton had interfered with investigat­ors.

— Clinton refused to let aides cooperate with subpoenas and dismissed an unfavorabl­e court ruling as “crazy” and partisan.

— She directed the White House counsel to lie about her deceit, then ordered him not to testify.

Can anybody imagine, in those circumstan­ces, a Republican speaker of the House and the Republican presidenti­al front-runner (the one Clinton ordered investigat­ed) steadfastl­y resisting calls for impeachmen­t?

There is long-standing tension among Democratic lawmakers and 2020 presidenti­al candidates about whether to answer Trump’s aggression and insults in kind or whether to be the grown-ups in the room.

On the campaign trail, Sens. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) and Kamala Harris (Calif.) have called for impeachmen­t, and a growing number of Democrats in Congress, from fiery Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.) to Rep. David Cicilline (R.I.), a member of Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (Calif.) leadership team, have joined the cause. Liberal activists rage against Pelosi “meeting fire with fecklessne­ss,” as New York magazine’s Eric Levitz put it.

But the mass of voters side with restraint, and even anti-establishm­ent Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has said impeachmen­t “works to Trump’s advantage.”

Americans, even reluctant Trump supporters, hunger to end the madness. This is likely why former vice president Joe Biden holds a commanding lead, even though he’s out of sync with the party base ideologica­lly and demographi­cally. And generally, Democrats seem to grasp the country’s need for normal.

This is an encouragin­g sign, as is party leadership’s efforts to resist an impeachmen­t stampede. Impeachmen­t may be inevitable if Trump continues to stiff-arm all inquiries.

But Democrats are right not to emulate Trump’s insults, falsehoods and extreme partisansh­ip as they go about their legitimate inquiries.

Maybe such restraint will be proved wrong in 2020, and voters will reward the insult hurlers.

But if Americans don’t desire a return to stability, honesty and decency, our democracy is already lost.

 ??  ?? Dana Milbank
Dana Milbank

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