It’s useless to try not to
talk about impeachment. It’s nearly impossible to avoid bringing it up. Running
away from impeachment conversations doesn’t mean the conversation in your head
will stop. So I’ll join in.
First, the national
conversation is about Trump, and that’s not an accident. For a while, we heard
and thought and talked about the Democratic candidates for President. They all
talked about Trump, but that was only a small part of their message. Trump
demands to be the lead in every news report, and now he is and will be for
weeks, if not all the way to November 2020. He didn’t impeach himself just to
top the news, but it’s a welcome outcome for him.
The impeachment inquiry came
about because Trump cannot distinguish between his own personal interests and
the interests of the US. He never had a job where he had to think about
anything but his own welfare. As a businessman, he was a constant public
disservice, forcing people to sue him because he discriminated against black
renters, stiffed the construction workers who built his buildings, and cheated
the students who enrolled in “Trump University”. His narcissistic personality
makes it difficult for him to think about anything but himself in any situation.
So it made sense for him to subordinate American foreign policy towards
Ukraine, Australia, and China to his worries about his electoral chances
against Joe Biden.
His thinking is dominated by
certain fixed ideas, which reason, evidence, and argument cannot budge. He
enlisted the Vice President, the Secretary of State and the Attorney General in
his pursuit of a Ukraine conspiracy theory, which hardly anyone has heard of
outside of radical right media, because it has no substance. Thomas Bossert,
Trump’s first homeland security adviser, told him it was nonsense, but no person or group of persons can talk him out of these
obsessions. Long after it was definitively proven that Obama was born in
Hawaii, Trump continued to say he believed in his own lies.
The obsessions are about his
exaggerated beliefs in his success and refusal to believe in any failure. He
can’t stand the fact that he lost the popular vote to Clinton by 3 million
votes. So he embraces one explanation after another, not based on anything more
than his wishful thinking – first millions of undocumented people illegally
voted for Clinton, now Ukraine plus the “deep state” secretly helped Clinton’s
campaign and tried to pretend that Russia was helping Trump.
His political opinions are
not convictions but malleable positions, depending on his interests and the
moment. He has no fundamental beliefs except himself. That is evident from his
changing positions on abortion, Democrats, and
gay rights. Who
jumps to the opposite side on every major issue of political culture?
He has no empathy or respect
for people outside of his family. His family might be able to impress him with
reasoned criticism, but they don’t because they are like him, putting self
before any principle. More than any other group of people, their future is tied
to his success or failure.
The American President
presents the dangerous combination of absolute confidence that he is always
right and always knows best, and a brain filled with nonsensical ideas. He
commits impeachable offenses every day.
I don’t think that
impeachment will get Trump out of the White House. There are not 20 Republican
Senators who have the courage and patriotism to enforce the national interest
when it might mean they lose an election. They share Trump’s ranking of their
own political fortunes over any constitutional duty.
I think what matters is
whether some Republicans in the House vote to impeach and some Republicans in
the Senate vote to convict. In recent days, the first Republican dissenters
have spoken out, led by Mitt Romney. Thus far, Senators Romney, Ben Sasse, and
Susan Collins have openly criticized Trump. Republicans Will Hurd from Texas, Fred Upton of
Michigan, and Mark Amodei of Nevada in the House have expressed support for investigating Trump, but are still wary of impeachment. Democratic
Congressman Brendan Boyle says that “two dozen” of his Republican colleagues in
the House are deeply concerned about Trump’s impeachable actions, although few
have said anything. The defections from Trump worship may bring out others.
This is history, and what each Republican politician does or doesn’t do, says
or doesn’t say, will define their legacies.
Unless more Republicans than
the few so far show that they believe that he is a menace to our country, the
impeachment inquiry will have little effect on the 2020 election. And that is
the vote that matters.
Steve Hochstadt
Jacksonville IL
October 8, 2019
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