The GOP is the party of overlook; Democrats
must be the party of oversight.
Over the course of my dusty
television career, I have from time to time run into situations where a certain
Hollywood celebrity type will make a threat—not to do interviews or make public
appearances on behalf of a show, for example—unless some egregious demand of
his or hers is met.
It’s a trap. Even if you meet their
demand, my experience has been that they still won’t do what you request, nor
did they ever intend to, no matter how much kowtowing you do.
The mean ones get a noxious thrill from their ability to manipulate and diminish others.
The mean ones get a noxious thrill from their ability to manipulate and diminish others.
So Congress, have you met Donald
Trump?
By now, you of all legislative bodies should know that nothing you do or say makes much difference to him, that whatever he will or won’t do is based not on policy or philosophy or your stated preferences but on whim, ego and a feral sense of self-preservation.
By now, you of all legislative bodies should know that nothing you do or say makes much difference to him, that whatever he will or won’t do is based not on policy or philosophy or your stated preferences but on whim, ego and a feral sense of self-preservation.
Thus we have our own celebrity
brat-in-chief, a thuggish tot whose response to very attempt to uphold the
Constitution and to maintain the balance of power among the three equal
branches of government is a childish but deeply dangerous, “I don’t wanna.”
Sent subpoenas for documents and
witnesses, Trump replies,
”We’re fighting all the subpoenas” (I don’t wanna).
Ordered by law to release his tax
returns, the president claims he’s still under audit and by the way, no (I
don’t wanna).
Letters requesting the congressional
testimony of such administration officials as Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin
and immigration troll Stephen Miller, forget about it (I don’t wanna).
That there should be checks and
balances in government chafes Trump. He’s a control freak who brooks no
criticism and wants total dictatorial power.
"Trump is not inventing
executive intransigence out of whole cloth," Heidi Kitrosser, author of
"Reclaiming Accountability: Transparency, Executive Power, and the U.S.
Constitution” told Jonathan
Allen at NBC News. "At the same time, this is not
same-old, same-old. He is taking longstanding pathologies in terms of an
increasingly imperial executive branch and ratcheting it up many times
over."
What’s more, his party is letting
him move ever closer to such authoritarianism with barely a whisper of
opposition. “Trump’s brazenness is the natural result of his party’s refusal to
defend the rule of law,” conservative columnist Jennifer
Rubin writes at the Washington Post. “They indulge him,
his conduct gets worse and the cycle repeats.”
He has to go.
Impeachment by the House won’t
actually do it—unless convicted by the Senate, the president stays in place—but
the impeachment process itself has much to recommend it, even more so than
various, extended congressional investigations of his assorted frauds and
betrayals of country.
I have thought about this a lot and
weighed the pros and cons.
For one thing, impeachment has a nice ring to it. I mean it. Impeachment is a solid concept, endowed to us by the Founders because they knew that there would come times between elections when the president had to be punished or even removed, and it creates a convenient umbrella for all the ongoing congressional inquiries coming together as one.
The process dramatically will point
a spotlight and provide a great public education on this administration’s corruption
and mendacity.
As we now know from the redacted
Mueller report, there is more than enough evidence to impeach on obstruction of
justice charges and even though the Mueller team did not find Trump and his
team directly conspiring with Russia to meddle in our election they did
absolutely nothing to discourage and indeed, welcomed what the report calls
“sweeping and systematic” interference.
Mueller has given Congress a
448-page roadmap to impeachment, and every action the Trump White House has
taken since to stymie and vilify further inquiries is just further proof why
impeachment’s necessary.
Andrew Cohen, fellow at NYU’s
Brennan Center for Justice, says it
well. Trump and his team, he writes, are “going to continue to act
this way until they are forced legally and politically to back down.
But we can’t wait for the courts to
sort it out, especially with the Supreme Court at its most conservative point
in nearly a century. And it’s no answer to say that the presidential election
of 2020 is the fairest way to resolve this problem.
There are 640 days left of the Trump
presidency (even if he is not re-elected next November) and each day without a
reckoning for what Trump has done is an insult to the Constitution as we have
known it. If the Democrats don’t at least hold impeachment hearings, they’ll be
derelict in their duty.”
Yes, I read the new
Washington Post/ABC News poll that indicates only 37% of the
people favor starting impeachment proceedings.
But go back to June 1973, a year after the Watergate break-in and a month or so into the now famous Senate Watergate hearings (just as John Dean was about to tell the committee that he advised Nixon there existed “a cancer growing on the presidency”).
At that point, per a Gallup poll at the time, only 19 percent of Americans sought Nixon’s impeachment; in other words, just half of those who favor it now.
Within months, as hearings publicized Nixon’s wrongdoings and the Saturday Night Massacre appalled the public, that number had doubled.
But go back to June 1973, a year after the Watergate break-in and a month or so into the now famous Senate Watergate hearings (just as John Dean was about to tell the committee that he advised Nixon there existed “a cancer growing on the presidency”).
At that point, per a Gallup poll at the time, only 19 percent of Americans sought Nixon’s impeachment; in other words, just half of those who favor it now.
Within months, as hearings publicized Nixon’s wrongdoings and the Saturday Night Massacre appalled the public, that number had doubled.
The journalist Elizabeth Drew, now
83, witnessed the events of Watergate. So did I, albeit as a mere wisp of a
lad; Watergate was a key part of my first television job. She wrote
perceptively about those events in her book, Washington Journal, republished
just a few years ago.
In the New York Times she now
notes the decision to impeach “is both more difficult and
consequential than the discussion of it suggests… But even if the
Republican-controlled Senate doesn’t vote to remove Mr. Trump, a statement by
the House that the president has abused his office is preferable to total
silence from the Congress. The Republicans will have to face the charge that
they protected someone they knew to be a dangerous man in the White House.”
Further, comparisons with the
boomeranging 1998 impeachment of Bill Clinton are odious; his behavior with an
intern and cruel, buffoonish attempts to cover it up were indeed deeply
shameful but hardly dangerous to freedom and nothing next to the current
president’s criminal subversion of democracy.
Democratic members of the House,
don’t be intimidated. With an impeachment vote, you make your Republican
colleagues go on the record as to whether they support this venal president,
whether their fear of him and concern for reelection, not to mention their
access to wealthy donors and lavish perks, is greater than love of country and
democracy.
Hold them accountable. Right now, the GOP is the party of overlook; Democrats must be the party of oversight.
Hold them accountable. Right now, the GOP is the party of overlook; Democrats must be the party of oversight.
Remember, too, that while you
investigate you can propose legislation as well; such was the case during
Nixon’s impeachment. Pursue Trump’s wrongdoing while at the same time offering
alternative programs for health, education, jobs, immigration and
infrastructure. You can be certain that Republicans will not.
Do as Elizabeth Warren is doing:
campaign on such proposals as you continue to hold Trump’s feet to the fire.
As Hillary
Clinton and others have said we’re reasonably sure Congress and
candidates can walk and chew gum at the same time.
In this way, Norm Ornstein of
the American Enterprise Institute (although urging careful inquiries first and
extreme caution) writes, “… impeachment would look powerfully more like a
logical and necessary step, less like a vindictive, partisan move.”
So stop dithering. Don’t forfeit
your advantage by letting Trump’s bullying get into your head. Don’t be afraid.
This is no time to go wobbly, as a certain British PM once admonished an
American president.
If you think that by going down the
impeachment route, Trump will jump up and down screaming and rattle his prized
clamoring base at you, you’re right, but trust me—like those Hollywood
celebrity types I mentioned at the beginning, the ones who meanly make threats
to manipulate and diminish—he’s going to do that no matter what you do or say
or ask.
Don’t wobble. Time to stand up.
Investigate. Illuminate. Impeach.
Michael Winship is the Schumann Senior Writing Fellow for Common Dreams. Previously, he was the Emmy Award-winning senior writer for Moyers
& Company and
BillMoyers.com, a past senior writing fellow at the policy and advocacy group
Demos, and former president of the Writers Guild of America East. Follow him on
Twitter: @MichaelWinship