USA TODAY International Edition

Censure Trump, don’t impeach him

That could get Republican votes

- Ari Fleischer Ari Fleischer was White House spokesman in the George W. Bush administra­tion.

If the Democrats’ drive to impeach and convict President Donald Trump is going to be successful, they need to persuade Republican­s who have misgivings about the president to support their bid to remove him from office. They have failed.

I know, because I’m one of those Republican­s. I voted against Trump in the primary and left my ballot blank in the general. There is much about Donald Trump that I don’t like or support. There is much about his policies and what he has accomplish­ed that I do.

I haven’t hesitated to criticize the president when he warrants it. From the start I said, often on Fox News, that Trump’s July 25 call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was inappropri­ate. No president, or member of Congress, should ask a foreign nation to investigat­e political opponents. It was wrong when the president asked Ukraine to do that.

Elected officials and White House aides should stay out of judicial investigat­ive matters. Once they weigh in, they inherently politicize a subject that, in the United States at least, we believe should be guided by the principle that justice is blind.

When a politician calls for an investigat­ion of a political opponent, he or she does not seek a blind outcome. A preferred outcome is sought.

It’s also problemati­c when a U. S. leader asks a foreign nation, particular­ly a nondemocra­tic one, to get involved. There is no guarantee a foreign nation will do what’s right. It’s more likely to do what’s in its national interest, regardless of what the facts and truth are.

Witnesses called by Democrats in the impeachmen­t hearings have made the case that the president and his top aides wanted Ukraine to investigat­e the Bidens. Of course he did. He said so in his “perfect” July 25 phone call. He also, unwisely, publicly called on China to do the same. He once, also unwisely, publicly called on Russia to release Hillary Clinton’s emails if it had them.

BB’s and duds

The problem the Democrats have is that their impeachmen­t hearings proved a point that almost everyone knows: Trump did it.

The Democrats, and much of the news media, say the hearings were full of bombshells and smoking guns. But the smoking guns were BB’s and the bombshells were duds.

In football terms, Trump deserves a flag for a false start, or maybe unnecessar­y roughness. But the Democrats want to add up all the penalty flags Trump has earned in three years of his presidency, and they see the Ukrainian phone call as incontrove­rtible proof that the president should be thrown out of the game.

I, on the other hand, heard nothing that rises to the level of impeachmen­t.

If the Democrats were smart, they would drop impeachmen­t and instead vote to censure the president for his phone call and his attempts to link an investigat­ion to military aid and/ or an Oval Office visit. I suspect many Republican­s would vote for it.

That would be a bipartisan outcome. But the Democrats can’t stop themselves. Their hatred of the president, driven by their growing liberal base and shortage of conservati­ve or moderate members, has led to this gigantic waste of time that will result in a one- party, partisan impeachmen­t.

It’s up to the governed

The Democrats fail to understand how anyone, especially those who have misgivings about the president, can’t support impeachmen­t. They don’t accept that elections are the superior remedy to issues like this. We’re a republic if we can keep it, they like to say.

We’re also, as the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce states, a nation in which the government derives its just powers from the consent of the governed.

The governed should decide what to do with President Trump, not 218 House members and 67 senators as called for under the Constituti­on.

As an occasional Trump critic and an occasional Trump supporter, I have a deal for the Democrats: I won’t try to persuade them to support the president if they will stop trying to persuade me to impeach and convict him.

 ?? LUIS M. ALVAREZ/ AP ?? In West Palm Beach, Florida, on Saturday.
LUIS M. ALVAREZ/ AP In West Palm Beach, Florida, on Saturday.

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