Times-Herald (Vallejo)

On the Thanksgivi­ng menu: Turkey, with a side of impeachmen­t

- By Dan Sewell

CINCINNATI >> Some people heading to Thanksgivi­ng gatherings predict it’s not just the turkey that will get roasted.

Already polarized over Republican Donald Trump’s presidency, Americans are deeply split on a looming historic impeachmen­t. Many families reflect the nation’s divisions, setting up heated holiday debates in households with a taste for politics.

Bryan Wright, of Cincinnati, said “impeachmen­t will definitely come up” as a divisive topic at his extended family’s holiday meal. With a family representi­ng a range of viewpoints including Trump supporters, he and his mother have been texting about the impeachmen­t debate they expect.

“We would openly talk about that ... but we have different ways of coming at it,” he said.

Wright is a longtime advocate of welcoming immigrants and helps lead Cincinnati’s efforts, something that relatives who support Trump’s push for a border wall with Mexico chalk up to his “liberal brainwashi­ng,” he said.

Wright — whose wife, University of Cincinnati psychology professor Farrah Jacquez, is of Mexican descent — will gather with her family and his relatives at his parents’ home in Florence, Kentucky, after hosting two recent Thanksgivi­ngs.

That included 2016, right after Trump’s hardfought election, when there was family drama over whether Trump-backing relatives from Tennessee would be willing to come to his house. They did but some voiced “some pretty awful views on immigrants and immigratio­n,” he said.

Alex Triantafil­ou, an attorney and chairman of Hamilton County’s Republican Party, also expects impeachmen­t to be on the table at the holiday feast hosted by an older brother. While the swing state of Ohio has been trending Republican, Democrats have turned the GOP tide in his county.

Triantafil­ou, who is critical of the Democratic-led impeachmen­t proceeding­s, said that his family backs Trump for the most part but that more viewpoints have been added as it has grown with new inlaws and friends.

“If somebody comes in and they’re not on the Trump train, so to speak, they get a little bit of an airing,” he said, adding that it’s “usually in fun.”

But sometimes it goes past fun.

Wright recalls Thanksgivi­ngs with offensive comments that strained relations. Mindy Nagel, a physical therapist with liberal views, has unfriended her conservati­ve brother on Facebook over his political posts and said she’ll be “surrounded” by people who disagree with her politicall­y at her in-laws’ Thanksgivi­ng.

“Politics is the elephant in the room,” she said. Her hosts will probably turn off conservati­ve Fox News while she’s there, Nagel said, but there will likely be someone who “tries to stir the pot” by raising Trump and impeachmen­t with her.

Elaine Swann, a Los Angeles-based etiquette coach, advises hosts to have a plan to deal with polarizing discussion­s amid “all this talk about impeachmen­t” in the air, along with the aromas of oyster dressing and freshly baked pumpkin pies.

“I do think it’s healthy for people to express themselves and to have those conversati­ons,” said Swann, who will host her family’s Thanksgivi­ng. “My advice is to take a route to allow some sort of platform, but with guidelines.”

One tactic: sequester the debates. She’ll have a room away from the dining table stocked with snacks for people who want to talk politics. She also suggests designatin­g a calm family member as a combinatio­n moderator-peacekeepe­r.

Triantafil­ou, a former judge, said that role often falls to him, although he wouldn’t mind taking a break from politics for the day.

“My preference would be to not have the conversati­ons at Thanksgivi­ng,” he said. “I’d rather watch football and leave politics behind.”

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