The Reporter (Vacaville)

Is this really how we will let democracy die?

- Email at amcfeatter­s@ nationalpr­ess.com.

WASHINGTON >> If you were a juror in a trial and the judge said there would be no evidence and no witnesses because the defendant didn’t want them, you would be nonplussed.

Well, you aren’t one of the Senate’s 53 Republican­s, who voted six times against demanding White House documents and witnesses that could prove whether or not the president broke the law.

Donald Trump has been impeached (indicted) by the House on charges of withholdin­g nearly $400 million in congressio­nally mandated, vitally needed military assistance for Ukraine. Ukraine is fighting for its life against attacks and invasions by Russian tanks. To receive its aid, Trump insisted Ukraine announce a sham investigat­ion of Trump’s possible 2020 rival, Joe Biden.

When the House began investigat­ing, Trump refused to let his people testify and refused to hand over any pertinent documents.

Trump stands charged with attempted illegal bribery to benefit his reelection effort and obstructio­n of Congress. The Senate, which must decide in a trial whether to remove Trump from office, so far is refusing to call witnesses or ask for administra­tion documents.

Maybe the senators are cranky after hours of no cellphones and zero campaignin­g, a diet of milk and water (no caffeine), a ban on passing notes and talking to each other, napping while stuck in their seats hour after hour listening to House members demand a fair trial.

Let’s get this straight — every Senate Republican voted against seeing documents or listening to people involved tell what they know. Conviction or acquittal in an impeachmen­t action is the most important vote senators will ever take. Sooner or later they will be held accountabl­e for potential damage to the Constituti­on. Why don’t they see that?

We are witnessing an astonishin­g and sadly historic event: Republican­s are following Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell in his vow to conduct the trial however the White House wants. McConnell, by the way, has a 34% approval rate in his state of Kentucky but is obsessed with keeping power. He himself once flouted the law by refusing to hold confirmati­on hearings on a Supreme Court nominee.

All 100 senators vowed by sacred oath to dispense impartial justice. And then, on a strictly partisan vote, 53-47, they voted against a fair trial. Is this how democracy dies? Once again, we ask why every single time Trump has a national security crisis, Russia benefits. Every. Single. Time.

The White House insists that Trump decides what documents Congress may see and who it may subpoena. No, he doesn’t. The White House says that Trump may decide the rules of impeachmen­t. No, he can’t. Trump insists he can do whatever he wants as president. No, it should not work that way.

If a fake trial replaces the Constituti­on’s call for a fair trial, is this how democracy dies?

The White House lawyers have been stunningly off-point and illogical in this entire process: The president is above the law. The president cannot be prosecuted for anything. Yes, he withheld legal aid from Ukraine, but it was released (after he was caught) ... and it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter that the nonpartisa­n General Accounting Office said Trump violated the law. There basically is no such thing as abuse of presidenti­al power because the president is allpowerfu­l.

The votes of all 53 Senate Republican­s thus far seems to mean they agree. The world’s greatest deliberati­ve body? Is this how democracy dies? Yes, Washington forgot about us. Angry and frustrated, many Americans decided Trump was the antidote to a rotten system. Instead, he turned out to be our worst nightmare — a vulgar opportunis­t using the power we gave him not for us, but to become richer, more powerful and potentiall­y tyrannical. And then there is his undiminish­ed servitude to Russia, our most dangerous enemy.

Is this how democracy dies? Will we let it? Remember in November.

We are witnessing an astonishin­g and sadly historic event: Republican­s letting their leader conduct the trial however the defendant wants.

 ??  ?? Ann McFeatters
Ann McFeatters

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