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Month: January 2021

Back to normal abnormal

Establishment Republicans are beginning to distance themselves from outgoing president Donald Trump. Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday condemned Trump for inciting the insurrectionists who trashed the Capitol on Jan. 6:

“The mob was fed lies,” McConnell said. “They were provoked by the president and other powerful people, and they tried to use fear and violence to stop a specific proceeding of the first branch of the federal government which they did not like.”

Those still in thrall to the soon-former president must have ground their teeth at words from the epitome of establishment Republicans dissing their god-king. But from Republicans who do want to get back to “normal” expect born-again deficit-hawkism now that Democrats control the presidency and both houses of Congress. Because their opposition to “big government” is never about taxes or size of “deficits.” Big government is when tax dollars spent by Democratic administrations flow into the wrong pockets: rich people — good; poor/nonwhite people — bad.

Back to normal abnormal for both establishment Republicans and their political base means attacking government entitlements.

What they won’t attack is the sense among Republicans and Trump’s cult that they are entitled to run the United States of America. That it is theirs. They built it, they own it —them. No matter that hundreds of years of history and building preceded them. They believe this nation was bequeathed them by Jesus as a white-evangelical-Christian sinecure. A kingdom for white males to rule in perpetuity.

All those flowery words in the Declaration and Preamble about equality and general Welfare were just fine with white America so long as lessers knew their places. But since over the last half century everyone else began demanding the U.S. live up to those lofty words, the right has been pitching progressively more violent hissy fits.

And here we are, still repairing the doors and windows in the Capitol damaged when the pro-Trump insurrection pitched the most dramatic hissy fit yet. Conservative, white America was entitled to getting the president it wanted and popular sovereignty be damned.

Talk about entitled.

If only

We are not out of Oz yet. Squadrons of flying monkeys are still plotting raids on government and awaiting the “go” code from “Q” or Donald Trump.

Just after noon today, Jan. 20, the disastrous Trump presidency is scheduled to end. In an inauguration like no other, former Vice President Joe Biden will take the oath of office and become the 46th president of the U.S. Kamala Harris will become the first Black woman to serve as vice president.

Trump leaves Washington, D.C. a pariah. The city is “under militarized fortification” against a repeat of the insurrection by pro-Trump extremist who sacked the Capitol Jan. 6. (Wire services are clear of reports of new attacks.) The outgoing president will not attend the swearing-in. He cannot even get friends to see him off at the airport.

What Trump will do is snatch as much of Biden’s limelight as he can. Early this morning he granted clemency or pardons to 143 people, among them a rogues’ gallery of cronies, donors and potential future donors. It seems he was dissuaded from issuing preemptive pardons to himself, family members, or personal attorney Rudy Giuliani. But the morning is young.

CNN’s landing page headline this morning.

In addition to issuing pardons this morning, Trump rescinded his 2017 executive order barring former White House employees from lobbying the government. Noah Bookbinder, executive director of the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said of Trump pardoning cronies, “Amazingly, in his final 24 hours in office, Donald Trump found one more way to fail to live up to the ethical standard of Richard Nixon.”

Biden’s plate as new president is overflowing. He is expected to issue a flurry of executive orders his first day in office, many to undo policies put in place by Trump. Most pressing will be instructions aimed at gaining ground on the coronavirus pandemic Trump once assured Americans would “disappear as if by magic.” That was 400,000 dead Americans ago. Biden will institute a national mask mandate for federal employees and revoke the U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization.

Biden will reestablish the National Security Council’s directorate for global health security and biodefense. (Trump had disbanded it.) He will revoke Trump’s order to exclude noncitizens from the 2020 census count as well as the travel ban from several Muslim and African countries. Biden will also cancel Trump’s 1776 Commission whose widely panned report released Monday reads like a Bircher re-write of American history.

Moreover, Biden will press ahead with other proposals aimed at easing the economic burdens on Americans stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic:

He will also ask three key agencies — the Departments of Veterans Affairs, Agriculture and Housing and Urban Development — to extend foreclosure moratoriums for federally backed mortgages under their purview through at least the end of March.

Incoming White House officials emphasized the need for Congress to approve his larger relief package, which would extend unemployment benefits; dole out an additional $1,400 in stimulus payments for millions of Americans; and devote tens of billions of dollars to economic needs such as rental, housing and food assistance, among other measures.

Biden’s overarching challenge will be to lead a country that seems almost ungovernable, made so, says sociologist and political scientist Theda Skocpol, by a “political civil war dividing the white middle strata between those who want to be part of a multiracial, inclusive future, and those who fear and refuse that.”

The tensions behind that will remain long after the virus is vanquished. Clicking our heels together three times will not take us back to any version of Kansas we remember. If only.

In the meantime, Trump has left the building.

Goodnight Goon

A POEM FOR THE END

by Sheila Dershowitz 

Good night loon,
Good night goon,
Good night nastiest man in the room.

Good night lies,
Good night spies,
Good night rants and alibis.

Good night twitter,
Good night tweets.
Good night all those crazy bleats.

Good night red hats,
Good night cruel chants,
Good night sniveling syncophants.

Good night wall,
Good night cages,
Good night endless midnight rages.

Good night fine people on both sides,
Good night losers,
good night suckers
,Good night evil nasty fuckers.

Good night Ivanka
Good night Jared,
Good night Barron, we hardly knew ya.

Good night thief,
Good night grief,
Good night cruel and callous chief.

Good night fake news,
And Fox and friends,
This is how the nightmare ends.

Good night at last.
It’s time to go,
The American people told you so.

A human President

I wasn’t a Joe Biden supporter in the primaries. Of course, I wanted to beat Donald Trump so I was willing to support anyone who won the nomination. But my heart was with Elizabeth Warren and as a believer in the idea that you go with heart in the primaries and then fall in line in in the General, I voted for her first and then Biden with enthusiasm when the time came.

But, I will admit that there was one thing about Biden that made me feel positive about him from the beginning and it was his announcement speech. I felt that he understood the threat, maybe better than anyone. Whether he was going to be able to win or govern effectively, I didn’t know. But setting aside all the hokey, patriotic tugging at the heat strings, I did think he had recognized one of the most fundamental threats America faces in a way that others didn’t see with quite as much clarity.

America has been dreadful at living up to its ideals but it’s also been a beacon to immigrants throughout the world for centuries, which says something as well. It’s not all one thing. We are one great mixed up country.

But we can certainly do better than Donald Trump and his racist death cult, and we have:

Midnight plane to Georgia

The latest in the Axios report on The Final Days:

On Air Force One, President Trump was in a mood. He had been clear he did not want to return to Georgia, and yet somehow he’d been conscripted into another rally on the night of Jan. 4.

If both David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler — the two embattled Georgia senators he was campaigning for — lost their runoff elections the following day, the GOP would lose control of the U.S. Senate. And Trump did not want the blood of Georgia on his hands.

The TV in the plane’s conference room was set to Fox News, with the sound off. As the screen showed footage of supporters filling up the Dalton, Georgia, rally space, Trump’s spirits lifted briefly. “Look at that crowd,” he mused.

Then Fox shifted to an interview with Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger — whom Trump loathed for refusing to deny Joe Biden’s win or validate myths about fraud. The president’s disgust set back in. “What a horrible, incompetent guy,” he growled.

The day before, the Washington Post had published an extraordinary recording of Trump’s phone call pressuring Raffensperger, a Republican, to “find” 11,780 votes to overturn the results of the election in Georgia. Trump had accused Raffensperger of a “criminal offense.”

Loeffler and Perdue had been desperate to get Trump to return to Georgia. They’d backed his 11th-hour demands for $2,000 stimulus checks, an about-face for the two multimillionaire conservatives.

In return for an enthusiastic Trump at the rally, Loeffler submitted to an even greater concession: She agreed to join other Trump loyalists in voting against the Electoral College results certification which was coming up on Jan. 6 — the day after the Georgia runoffs. It was a decision she would reverse once rioters stormed the Capitol.

The situation in Georgia was fraught. Establishment Republicans feared Trump’s volatile denunciation of top state election officials would depress turnout.

In a series of phone calls through early and mid-November, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, had tried to impress upon Trump just how high the stakes were for the Georgia runoffs. McConnell’s pitch was direct and unvarnished: We need these wins to protect all the progress we’ve made on a range of issues, he warned. Trump’s own legacy was on the ballot.

But the president wasn’t hearing it. He would immediately derail these conversations with McConnell by ranting about the stolen election and his conspiracies of fraud.

Before the flight, Trump was briefed on turnout scenarios. Republicans anticipated correctly that Democrats would dominate the early Georgia vote, but they underestimated how big the Democrats’ turnout would also be on Jan. 5 itself. Republicans believed 900,000 Election Day voters would put them in a decent position to win the runoffs and that anything over 1 million was golden. They were wrong.

Trump’s growing congressional conspiracy caucus had a high-profile member on Air Force One that day. Joining the aides and family members who usually accompanied the president was the recently sworn-in Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who had gained national notoriety for her past QAnon support and whose district included Dalton.

Also aboard were two key allies — Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Club for Growth president David McIntosh, a former Indiana congressman who co-founded the Federalist Society and had studied law under the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

They sat around the long table in the conference room in brown leather chairs, served quinoa salad with roasted chicken before waiters brought in macarons. Graham asked instead for his standing dessert order when flying on Air Force One: strawberries and cream.

The president came down when they were finished eating and stood at the head of the table, where he chatted with them for most of the flight. Graham and McIntosh, who had exchanged strategy notes before the flight, tried to shake him out of his mood.

“Look — if they win, you’ll be vindicated,” McIntosh said, pleading with Trump to offer a full-throated endorsement of Loeffler and Perdue. “Everyone knows that if they win, you’ll get the credit for putting them over the top. And it’ll show that in an election where they don’t cheat, Republicans win.”

Trump disagreed: “No, they won’t, David. They’ll blame me if we lose. But if we win, they won’t give me the credit.”

Graham tried another tactic: “This is about your legacy, Mr. President.”

“We’ve got to win these so that the Democrats can’t unwind your legacy on everything from the courts to the economic policies to your work with China,” Graham insisted.

At one point in the flight, Trump pulled McIntosh into his private office cabin to sign an autograph for McIntosh’s personal trainer, an avid supporter of the president. McIntosh tried to open a conversation about the future. “Mr. President, you know, if it doesn’t turn out…”

Trump interrupted, by asking: “What do you think my odds are?” — referring, 62 days after the election, to his chances of serving a second term. McIntosh leveled, “It doesn’t look great, sir.” Trump agreed, “Yeah, that’s probably right.”

“Mr. President, if it doesn’t work out, will you run again?” McIntosh asked. Trump’s response was a rare and transitory blip from his usual strident pose. “Yeah, I’m thinking about that,” he said. “But you know, I’m going to be four years older.”

In Dalton, Trump stepped out onto the stage with his wife, pointing, smiling, waving, and clapping, as Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” blared. He was in his element, and the crowd went wild.

Less than 48 hours after Trump’s Georgia rally, both races had been called for the Democrats, Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. The Republicans had lost control of the Senate.

Trump was right that everyone would blame him. After all, he had spent months puncturing confidence in the voting system, turning his fire on Georgia’s own GOP leadership, and obsessing over states that he had lost fair and square.

He had allowed outsiders and conspiracists to supplant the professionals around him. He had fed a national sense of mistrust, rage and despair. Georgia was the last state where Trump would take his stand.

He was about to incinerate his legacy. Within 24 hours, the feral ground troops the president had summoned to execute his fantasy of overturning the election would storm the steps of the U.S. Capitol.

You could tell his heart wasn’t really in it.

I am not convinced that Trump won’t run again. His comments about being too old sound like Trump being momentarily down rather than something he actually believes. After all, Biden will be the same age as Biden is today — and Biden will still be four years older. A lot depends on his health, of course, and nobody really knows where we’ll be in four years. But I believe he’ll pull himself together in a few weeks and decide that being in politics is the best way to protect himself from prosecution and raise money, if nothing else.

The Republicans will scream bloody murder about “political retribution” is Trump if prosecuted at any level of government regardless, but it will be a cacophony if he’s running. So being a candidate will create pressure and possibly help him with that. And the money part is obvious. If he’s still in politics he has the capacity to raise a ton of it. If he’s just some kibbitzer on the sidelines, not so much.

So, we’ll see…

Whitewashing the Trump Mob

As we shift to a new administration and congressional majority, it’s important that we don’t take our eyes off the media for a second. They have never fully discarded their old habits and it’s extremely important that we don’t let them further blur the reality of what’s happened to our country.

Eric Boehlert’s invaluable newsletter, Press Run, will help you do that that. (You can subscribe here, and it’s well worth it.) Today he takes a look at how the New York Times is covering the aftermath of January 6th:

In the wake of the murderous mob that laid siege to the U.S. Capitol on January 6, the New York Times has produced a wave of coverage about Trump voters. In the hands of Times reporters, the loyalists are generally being portrayed as slightly confused and quirky people who are peddling “conspiracy theories” and “misinformation“;  guilty of “warping reality.” What they’re not portrayed as is being part of a dangerous insurrectionist movement committed to overthrowing an election — foot soldiers at the forefront of the rise of American fascism.

The insurrectionists are overwhelmingly white and they’re being treated with kid gloves.

The gentle embrace of the Trump mob comes after the Times flooded its news pages and website for four years with endless updates on Trump voters and how much his white, working class supporters inside Midwest diners love him and will never question him. (Times headlines: “Trump Backers Like His First Draft of a New America“; “Trump’s Fights Are Their Fights. They Have His Back Unapologetically.”)

The more recent coverage comes across as an attempt by the Times to humanize a radical movement by suggesting that it’s driven by confused people who are simply down on their luck. One article interviewed a truck-driving Trump supporter in Colorado and suggested he was driven to extremism because of “multiple catastrophes of the past year,” which turned out to be the truck driver having quit his job because he refused to wear a mask during a pandemic.

In truth, the Trump mob supports brutal, white supremacists groups that fueled the insurrection attack, and his loyalists demand unequivocally that Joe Biden’s election should be overturned. They’re devoted to shredding democracy in the name of the Trump cult. But that’s not at all how they come across at the Times. For one recent piece, the daily photographed a Trump sycophant in pleasing pictures as she posed with her pet in Central Park. Message to readers: She’s just like you!

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The Times even published a fashion analysis of the insurrectionist mob: “They came dressed for chaos. They came in red, white and blue face paint and star-spangled superhero outfits, in flag capes (American, yes, but also Confederate and Trumpian) and flag jackets and Trump bobble hats.”

Did I miss the paper’s in-depth look at how members of Antifa dressed as they battled the police in Portland, Oregon last summer?

Fact: The siege on the Capitol was supported by a tiny number of Americans, including just 15 percent of Republicans, according to a recent ABC News poll. Yet that small sliver of insurrectionists keeps getting ink at the Times. And the 81 million Americans who voted for Biden? They’ve been flushed down the memory hole since Election Day. As the exasperated Rude Pundit tweeted, “Jesus fuck @nytimes, can we have one article on people who are happy Biden won?”

After the 2016 elections, Times editors decided that because the paper had missed the story of the Trump win, reporters had to fan out nationwide and shine a spotlight on Trump voters. In 2020, Trump lost by seven million votes, so the Times leadership decided reporters has to fan out and shine a spotlight on Trump supporters ?

Since the bloody insurrection on January 6, the Times has checked in with an endless stream of Trump voters, including a: 

“commercial producer of maple syrup in northern Wisconsin”

“retired apartment manager and a self-published author in Georgia”

“retired landscaper” from western North Carolina

“fuel truck driver in Colorado”

“retired medical worker from Marshfield, Wis.”

“67-year-old retired salesman in Kenosha”

“fuel truck driver in Grand Junction, Colo.”

“retired dental assistant in western Pennsylvania”

“Trump supporter in northeast Pennsylvania”

“an evangelical Christian from Texas”

“pastor of First Baptist Dallas”

“dry wall contractor from Robbinsville, N.C.”

I’m sure the newsroom argument is that Trump voters are making news, therefore they’re garnering more Times attention. True, but they’re making news for a launching a murderous insurrection, and that central fact should be reflected in all the coverage.

Instead, supporters are often given a chance to parrot Trump lies in the pages of the Times:

“The rioters were not us. Maybe they were antifa. Maybe they were B.L.M..”

“I know that the violence was caused by bad actors from antifa and liberal progressives as well as Black Lives Matter.”

“If we tolerate a fraudulent election, I believe we cease to have a republic. We turn into a totalitarian state.”

“Are you OK with internment camps if you refuse to wear a mask or take a vaccination?”

“The people didn’t show up with guns trying to overthrow the government, but the media likes to spin it that way.”

“We had dead people voting, illegal aliens voting.”

“You know as well as I do they stuffed the ballots in the states of Georgia, Nevada, Arizona and Michigan.”

” [Rapheal] Warnock is a Marxist and [Jon] Ossoff is a communist.”

 “All of the things the country was founded on are under attack, they are trying to get the name of God out of everything, especially the name of Jesus.”

The Times needs to start covering the Trump mob for what it is: a dangerous band of insurrectionists.

You can subscribe to Press Run here.

The Impeachment Case Against Donald Trump

I saw that Lindsey Graham is demanding a vote to “cancel” the impeachment trial of Donald Trump. I don’t know if he will get that. I suppose it’s possible that Mitch McConnell is just setting up some kind of censure and move on thing by saying on the floor today that Trump provoked the insurrection of January 6th.

But if he isn’t and they go ahead with the trial as they should, here’s a piece on the evidence they have and the case they can make:

The specific ground for Trump’s second impeachment, “incitement of insurrection,” immediately takes off the table two of the core defenses Trump asserted last year when he was impeached for the first time:

The conduct alleged against him might have been inappropriate, but it wasn’t a crime; and

Crime or no crime, the alleged misconduct didn’t rise to the level of an impeachable offense.

Defense No. 2—that the alleged misconduct doesn’t rise to the level of an impeachable offense—is plainly not available in Impeachment II. The very thought that inciting an insurrection against the United States doesn’t rise to the level of an impeachable offense is laughable. If inciting an insurrection against the United States isn’t an impeachable offense, nothing is.

Defense No. 1—that a specific statutory crime must be alleged and proved to impeach and remove a president—isn’t really a defense at all. Rather, it’s a fringe theory rejected by the vast majority of constitutional scholars.

But even if proof of a statutory crime were required, it would not help Trump escape conviction this time around because Impeachment II does charge Trump with a crime.

Incitement of insurrection is a crime, full stop: 18 U.S.C §2383 states that any person who “incites” or “assists” an insurrection, or “gives aid or comfort thereto,” shall be fined or imprisoned for not more than ten years, “and shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States.”

Since the sufficiency of the charge on its face is not at issue, the Senate trial will focus primarily on deciding whether Trump is guilty as charged. Process and political calculations will also come into play, but we’ll get to that in a moment.

For now, let’s take a look at the strength of the legal case against Trump.

Because incitement always involves some form of speech, courts and legal analysts have struggled to define a bright line between speech that is protected under the First Amendment and speech that isn’t. Simply put, not all speech is “free” or constitutionally protected. Think, for instance, of laws prohibiting fraud, defamation, and criminal conspiracies.

Generally speaking, speech that is merely offensive, shocks the conscience, or even repulses audiences is protected by the First Amendment. Even speech that advocates the use of force or the commission of unlawful acts is generally protected.

However, there are exceptions. Speech designed to incite imminent lawless action is not protected.

Drawing the line isn’t always easy, but there are guideposts. Over a hundred years ago, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes put it this way in Schenck v. United States:

The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent. It is a question of proximity and degree.

More recently, the Supreme Court in Brandenburg v. Ohio summarized the development of the law this way (the emphasis is mine):

[Previous court] decisions have fashioned the principle that the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit a State to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action.

The precise articulation of the standard aside, this much is clear: context is crucial in determining the line between protected advocacy and prohibited incitement. Courts will look at not only what was said, but when it was said, where it was said, to whom it was said, and, crucially, whether it was foreseeable and likely that the speech would incite imminent unlawful conduct.

So, let’s look at Trump’s January 6 speech, the one on which his impeachment was almost exclusively based, in both words and context.

At around noon on January 6, Trump faced an angry, agitated mob of somewhere between 10,000 and 30,000 of his supporters who had gathered at the National Mall, less than a 10-minute walk from the United States Capitol.

The mob was angry because Trump had systematically made them so in a relentless two-month campaign of lies. Trump claimed, over and over, that the 2020 presidential election had been “rigged,” that he had actually won the election “by a lot” (despite the fact that the certified election results showed that Joe Biden had won convincingly), and that the supposed election fraud was “the biggest SCAM in our nation’s history.”

Trump’s pre-January 6 grooming of his supporters wasn’t just a campaign of lies, it was a call to action. Trump summoned his supporters to Washington D.C. specifically on January 6, not merely to express their dissatisfaction, but to do something concrete: “Stop the Steal.”

Trump’s call to action culminated when he exhorted supporters at a January 4 rally in Georgia to “take back” the election:

If the liberal Democrats take the Senate and the White House—and they’re not taking this White House—we’re going to fight like hell, I’ll tell you right now . . . We’re going to take it back.

This statement on January 4 is a good point of reference because it shows how speech can not be considered incitement: Trump is calling for violence, but in an unspecified manner at an indefinite time. This is the kind of context that makes such speech protected.

The context of January 6 was very different.

On the morning of January 6, the mob Trump had summoned assembled just a short walk from the Capitol, where a joint session of Congress was underway to tabulate the election results. This group was angry and prepared for violence: Many in attendance were dressed in combat gear, with helmets and body armor. Some were openly brandishing weapons, others were carrying concealed firearms (in contravention of local law). Others were waving Confederate flags or bedecked in anti-government and anti-Semitic messages.

It was clearly known that many in the crowd were prepared to take violent action. They had openly bragged that they were going to do so, and they had already started even before the rally began. At least ten Trump supporters had been arrested the night before, mostly on weapons charges, after clashing with police. The FBI had issued an explicit warning that extremists were preparing to commit violence and “war.”

It was in this context that Trump stood to address the mob late in the morning of January 6. It is this context in which his words must be understood.

Trump began his speech by telling the press to turn its cameras to show the crowd “because these people are not going to take it any longer.”

Trump flogged his “we’re not going to take it any longer” theme incessantly throughout his speech, peppering his remarks with variations of “we’re not going to take it” and “our country has had enough,” and “we’re not going to let that happen” at least a dozen times.

And he told the crowd exactly what he wanted them to do about it.

First, he aimed them at a target: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol;” “we’re going to walk down, and I’ll be there with you;” “I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building;” “We’re going to the Capitol.”

Then he told them exactly what he wanted them to do when they got there: “We will stop the steal.”

The meaning of this phrase was unmistakable. At that point, after the votes of the electors had been certified, the only way to “stop the steal” and overturn the election was to stop the joint session of Congress from performing the constitutional duty it was attempting to perform at that very moment.

And so the insurrection was launched. It succeeded in part and failed in part. It succeeded in delaying Congress from performing its constitutional duty—and likely in intimidating a number of members of Congress into supporting their cause. It failed in that it did not ultimately prevent Congress from doing its job.

Some of Trump’s defenders insist that his speech should be judged entirely by the presence of a single word that Trump uttered 18 minutes into his hour-and-a-quarter exhortation to action: “peacefully.” But the same context that protects Trump’s remarks from January 4 makes the single use of “peacefully” on January 6 look more like consciousness of guilt than an attempt to prevent violence.

Context truly is everything. And it cuts both ways.

At the end of the day, there is no legal defense for Trump’s conduct. He incited the insurrection. The Republicans in the Senate know it, so during any eventual trial they will focus on process and political arguments.

The process arguments will go pretty much like this: The impeachment process was rushed, without witnesses, hearings, or an opportunity for Trump to defend himself. And there’s no constitutional basis for a Senate trial because Trump is already out of office.

The “rush to judgment” argument is, for the most part, without merit. Yes, the impeachment took place at warp speed, but it was based entirely on actions that took place in full public view, almost entirely on television. Since there are no material facts in dispute, hearings would have been pointless and unnecessary, nothing more than a showcase for political rhetoric.

The “he’s already gone” argument is more complicated. There is some precedent for holding a Senate trial after the impeached official has already left office, but it’s scant and not particularly relevant. Whether the Senate can hold an impeachment trial after the official is already out of office is a legal question that can and almost certainly will be decided by the Supreme Court, probably before any trial takes place. If the Supreme Court says no, then there will never be a Senate trial.

If there is a trial, Trump’s defenders will rely primarily on political arguments. They will argue that convicting Trump will further divide and inflame the country at a time when we should be seeking unity, not further division.

Put aside the grotesque level of hypocrisy in this plea. From a practical perspective, it is simply not true: There is absolutely no reason to believe that foregoing a Senate trial will lower the rhetoric or promote national unity in any way that matters. We know this because with or without a Senate trial, large numbers of elected Republicans have continued—and will continue—to claim that Joe Biden stole the election, that Donald Trump was the rightful winner, and that our federal government is illegitimate.

Until the majority of elected Republicans stop spreading this lie and admit that they have been lying about the election, then there will be no “unity.” Forgoing an impeachment trial isn’t going to pacify people who believe that Joe Biden’s presidency is the product of a putsch.

We’re in for a hard rain, Senate trial or not. There is nothing to be gained by trying to assuage the feelings of white supremacists, conspiracy theorists, and other MAGA crazies.

It’s time to hold bad actors accountable, not to appease them. It is time to let the truth have its day.

And this is only the beginning. There is a whole lot of accountability to go around.

FTR: it wasn’t a hoax

I think it’s important to lay down a marker on the Russia stuff as Trump’s first term fades into history. It was a disgrace and turning it into a crazy leftwing conspiracy theory was Trump’s greatest triumph.

David Corn reminds us what actually happened:

To the dying days of his presidency, Trump has insisted Russiagate was all a hoax. And in a cult-like fashion, the Republican Party has loudly and fervently echoed his denials and phony counter-accusations. When Trump, in one of his last acts as president, awarded Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), Trump’s pit-bull defender, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the White House cited Jordan’s effort to “unmask the Russia hoax.” But the facts are quite clear—this was no hoax—and they are worth reviewing and remembering, as the first president who helped a foreign power attack the United States leaves office.

Here are the indisputable basics. Russian leader Vladimir Putin ordered a covert assault, employing information warfare, on the 2016 US election. A 2017 report of the intelligence community, the 2019 report of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, a 2018 House Intelligence Committee report, and a 2020 Senate Intelligence Committee report all stated that. The attack was real. Each of these reports—with the exception of the one from the House Intelligence Committee, which was written by highly partisan GOP allies of Trump—note that one critical aim of the Russian operation was to elect Trump. And it is certainly obvious that Moscow’s hack-and-leak covert action, which released stolen Democratic emails and documents, hurt Hillary Clinton’s campaign and boosted Trump, particularly when it started disseminating pilfered material hours after the emergence of the Access Hollywood video that showed Trump boasting that he grabbed women “by the pussy.” (The weaponized leaking of these Democratic records continued through the final four weeks of the campaign.)

So there’s one big incontrovertible fact: Trump won the presidency with Russian assistance. Ands another: Trump and his lieutenants aided and abetted Putin’s attack on the United States.

For years, Trump and his minions have strived to define the main issue of the scandal as collusion: was there evidence that he or his campaign directly conspired with Moscow’s clandestine project to torpedo the American election? Trump contended there was no joint plotting and, thus, the whole scandal was a scam perpetuated by his diabolical political enemies, including the Deep State, the Democratic Party, and the media. His defenders in the conservative world, the rightwing press, and Congress pushed this point hard. And they (falsely) claimed as slam-dunk evidence the Mueller probe’s conclusion that it had not uncovered evidence of a criminal conspiracy between Trump and the Russians, misrepresenting this finding as a declaration there had been no collusion. 

Trump largely succeeded with his no-collusion defense. Indeed, no smoking gun evidence showing him scheming directly with Russians materialized. But even so, there was, at a minimum, overwhelming evidence of attempted collusion. On June 9, 2016, Donald Trump Jr., Paul Manafort, then the Trump campaign chief, and Jared Kushner held a secret meeting in Trump Tower with a Russian emissary, whom they were told was bringing them Clinton dirt as part of a secret Kremlin effort to help Trump. Ultimately, the information she shared wasn’t of much use, and there is no indication much came of this meeting. But this get-together—which didn’t become known to the public until after the election—showed that the Trump gang was made aware of Moscow’s desire to covertly assist Trump and that it was willing to conspire with Putin. At the time, the meeting signaled to Moscow that the Trump campaign would look kindly upon covert Kremlin intervention in the 2016 election. This was encouragement. 

Moreover, as multiple reports have pointed out, Manafort, throughout the election, was in secret contact with Konstantin Kilimnik, a former business colleague, and shared with him inside polling data from the Trump campaign. Mueller characterized Kilimnik as an “associate” of Russian intelligence. And the Senate Intelligence Committee report—which was approved by the Republican members of the committee—described Kilimnik as a “Russian intelligence officer.” The committee put it bluntly: “Kilimnik likely served as a channel to Manafort for Russian intelligence services.” It also noted that Manafort had directly and indirectly communicated with Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska and several pro-Russian oligarchs in Ukraine. 

This is a headline that has not gotten the attention it deserved: Trump’s top campaign aide was in touch with a Russian intelligence officer, while Moscow was attacking the United States. It gets worse. The Senate report stated, “The Committee obtained some information suggesting Kilimnik may have been connected to the [Russian intelligence’s] hack and leak operation targeting the 2016 U.S. election.” Yes, according to this GOP-endorsed report, Trump’s campaign manager was in close contact with a Russian intelligence officer possibly tied to Putin’s clandestine assault on the 2016 campaign to help elect Trump. That’s a tremendous scandal in of itself. The report also revealed that the committee found “two pieces of information” that “raise the possibility” that Manafort himself was connected “to the hack-and-leak operations.”

The report’s discussion of that particular information, though, was redacted. The report additionally noted that Manafort explored using his access to Trump to help advance Russian interests by promoting a pro-Russia “peace plan” for Ukraine that would allow Russia to control eastern Ukraine. This Senate investigation—which took years to complete—strongly suggested attempted, if not actual, collusion beyond the Trump Tower meeting. It indicated that the full Russia story still remains unknown.

After the election, the public also learned that Trump had engaged in his own direct act of attempted Russian collaboration: During the campaign, Trump—though he publicly asserted he had nothing to do with Russia—had been secretly negotiating a tower deal in Moscow that could have earned him hundreds of millions of dollars, and his company had sought help for this project from Putin’s office. Trump had covered-up his private Russian dealings while running for president. 

But there was much more to the Trump-Russia scandal than the question of collusion. Whether or not Trump and his crew worked directly with Russian operatives, they assisted the operation by denying its existence. This is where Trump betrayed the nation in full public light. Throughout the campaign, he and his aides publicly declared that the Russian attack was not happening. Manafort, Trump Jr., and others dismissed talk of Moscow’s interference as poppycock. In his debates with Clinton, Trump mocked accusations of Russian intervention. Roger Stone, a longtime Trump lieutenant, repeatedly asserted Russia had nothing to do with the hack-and-leak operation targeting the Democrats, and he amplified the cover story created by Putin’s operatives that the hack had been orchestrated by a Romanian hacker.

Yet at the same time, Trump was trying to use Stone as a conduit to get inside information from WikiLeaks on what Russia-swiped goods it had on Clinton and when they would be released—an action that Trump, according to the Senate Intelligence Committee, essentially lied about to Mueller. (Stone was subsequently found guilty of lying to investigators about his interactions with WikiLeaks—apparently covering up Trump’s role in this—and was sentenced to 40 months. In December, Trump pardoned Stone, Manafort, and other Russiagate figures.)

Trump and his henchmen were providing cover for Putin’s operation. Here was how the Senate report summed it up: “The Trump Campaign publicly undermined the attribution of the hack-and-leak campaign to Russia and was indifferent to whether it and WikiLeaks were furthering a Russian election interference effort… The Campaign was aware of the extensive media reporting and other private sector attribution of the hack to Russian actors prior to that point.” The GOP-led committee concluded that Trump, Manafort, and others aided the Russian assault by dismissing its existence. And there was that famous moment in July 2016 when Trump encouraged Russia to hack Clinton’s email. According to Mueller, Russian hackers hours later tried to do just that. 

Lost in the shouting over collusion has been the fundamental point that Trump helped an enemy of the United States pull off an attack because that assault was beneficial for him. Call it treason, call it treachery, it was a foul deed. And Trump’s skulduggery worked. The Russian operation continued through the campaign, and Trump gained from it. 

Trump’s denials of this attack were perhaps the first sign of how he would lead the Republicans into the perilous territory of alternative reality. Because Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, was insisting there was no Kremlin operation, Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell got in line. He refused President Barack Obama’s request to join the White House in issuing a bipartisan response to Putin’s assault. McConnell sided with party—that is, Trump—over country.

Consequently, the Russia attack became a highly partisan matter, and the United States response was undermined. In this hyper-politicized environment, the Clinton campaign’s warnings about Russian intervention were largely disregarded. Trump was able reap the reward of Putin’s operation without paying a price for assisting an enemy. 

With Putin’s operatives on Trump’s side—and Trump echoing Putin’s we-didn’t-do-it cover story—Trump won the election. Afterward, he continued to have Putin’s back. He ceaselessly railed about the Russia “hoax” and the investigations underway. Enraged about the FBI’s ongoing probe, he fired its director, James Comey. In a May 2017 Oval Office meeting, Trump yukked it up with Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and told them he was not concerned about Moscow’s attack on the 2016 election. In other words, thanks and carry on! (In that meeting, Trump also disclosed highly classified information to the Russians.)

The following year, during a joint press conference with Putin in Helsinki, Trump shockingly said he accepted Putin’s denials of Russian intervention in the election over the conclusions of his own intelligence community. Trying to escape the Russian taint on his electoral victory, Trump never once said he would hold Moscow accountable for its brazen assault on American democracy. Meanwhile, he took numerous steps that Mueller considered possible criminal acts of obstruction of justice to thwart the Russia investigations. And as the 2020 election approached, Trump refused to address the possibility of another Russian attack and smothered discussion of this threat. 

Through all of this, he and his GOP handmaids devised distractions and outlandish conspiracy theories to deflect attention from the bottom line of the Russia scandal: Moscow covertly influenced the 2016 election, and Trump abetted that attack.

Trump, the Republicans, Fox, and other rightwing disinformation pushers claimed that the Obama administration had unlawfully spied on the Trump campaign and insisted that the Russia investigation was a baseless probe concocted to block Trump from the presidency. (The Senate Intelligence Committee report noted that Manafort “represented a grave counterintelligence threat,” that the FBI and CIA were right to be alarmed by contacts between Russians and the Trump campaign, and that the bureau was justified in opening up an investigation in mid-summer 2016). Trump and his disciples obsessed over the Steele memos, which the FBI had indeed improperly used to justify a surveillance warrant for Carter Page, a former Trump campaign foreign policy adviser.

But the surveillance of Page, who had made a suspicious trip to Moscow in 2016, was but one thin slice of the investigation, and, contrary to the Trumpers’ conspiracy theories, the Steele memos were not used to open the Russia investigation. And though the Steele memos’ sensational allegation about Trump and a “pee tape” was likely inaccurate, the Senate report revealed other episodes in which Russian intelligence possibly had developed kompromat—blackmail material—on Trump based on his personal conduct during trips to Russia. 

During Trump’s first impeachment, House Republicans relied on the false notion that Ukraine, not Russia, had intervened in the 2016 election to defend their Dear Leader. (Trump’s effort to pressure the Ukrainian president to manufacture a phony investigation to show this—which would clear Russia—had led to that initial impeachment.) For years, Trump’s Republican loyalists, following his lead, lied about the Russia scandal and took whatever desperate measures they could cook up to miscast it as nothing but a partisan crusade to destroy Trump.

The story was complicated and that worked to Trump’s advantage. But the fact is that the Russian government intervened in the 2016 election to sabotage Hillary Clinton and help Donald Trump. At the very least, Trump and his minions welcomed the interference and were too stupid and corrupt to care about the consequences. And then Trump did everything in his considerable power to obstruct any investigation into what they did.

And then, inexplicably, over and over again as president, Trump treated Vladimir Putin like his long lost best friend, making it impossible to believe he wasn’t somehow in his debt. We may never know if Trump was just as stupid as he appeared to be or was an amoral, ambitious traitor. But there was something way, way off in his behavior that can’t be adequately explained in any other way.

These are facts and the braying from the right about “the Russia hoax” (and the left about “Russia Derangement”) are nothing but propaganda and excuses for failing to give a damn about the fact that the president had gleefully accepted the help of an autocratic adversary of the United States to defeat a Democratic Party politician they did not like.

Trump was a war president

One of the more remarkable achievements of Donald Trump’s unique form of hucksterism is that he was able to create a myth that he is a branding genius when his only real brand is his name, something he inherited from his father. Trump also took credit for political slogans that were created by other people, although it’s highly unlikely he knew where they came from or what they referred to when he cribbed them.

The most famous is “Make American Great Again” which was Ronald Reagan’s campaign slogan in 1980. There was also “Law and Order,” Richard Nixon’s 1968 dog whistle and going back even further “America First,” which was the isolationist’s slogan in the years before Pearl Harbor pulled the US into World War II. He has little to no historical knowledge so he almost certainly didn’t see that reference when he used it to explain his foreign policy which really came down to, “we do whatever we want, and you will pay us ‘protection’ to make sure we don’t do it to you. We are untouchable because our massive military is so bloated no one will mess with us no matter what. We’re Number 1!”

One appealing aspect of that weird and incoherent policy to many people on both sides of the political spectrum was the idea that America would withdraw from the hot wars we’d been bogged down in since 9/11. Trump claimed that he wanted to do that but was clueless, of course, and proceeded to make decisions willy nilly, antagonizing traditional adversaries, like Iran, as well as insulting our allies, like Germany, raising the stakes dramatically. Mike Pence fatuously declared that this was “peace through strength” but it was anything but. It was dumb luck.

Under Trump, the U.S. has been involved in increasingly deadly conflicts in Yemen,  Somalia and Niger. His belated 11th Hour “drawdowns” Iraq, Afghanistan, and various African countries are being rushed without proper planning or forethought at the end of his term, leaving them more likely to be landmines set to explode on the Biden administration. As the Nation’s Andrew McCormick wrote in a scathing indictment of Trump’s policy:

To be clear, I’m no proponent of indefinite or ill-defined troop deployments, and in this magazine I’ve argued on multiple counts against forever war. I believe America should pursue every responsible option to leave Afghanistan and that a thorough review of our footprints in East Africa and elsewhere is long overdue. Drawdown shouldn’t look like this, though. To our foreign partners, whom we have trained and fought with; to the people of these countries whom we have asked to trust America, even despite the enormous human tragedies war has wrought; and, speaking from just one veteran’s perspective, to all the military men and women who have served and died in these conflicts over the years, America’s leaders owe a great deal more than a slipshod, self-interested rush out the door.

We should have been out of many of these places a long time ago but giving Trump any credit for his belated decisions even as he made incoherent or obviously ill-considered decisions to favor his dictator buddies, as he did with Turkey and Syria, is ridiculous. His killing of the Iranian General Qasem Soleimani was one of the most provocative acts by the U.S. in many a moon and it was only by the forbearance of Iranian leaders that it did not escalate into a terrible conflagration.

Still, it is true that he did not start any new wars in foreign countries. Some people on the right are saying this makes him the first president since Dwight Eisenhower not to do so but that’s not true. Still, he is the first since Jimmy Carter who can say that. (Frankly, I think that’s probably attributable to “the Madman Theory” than anything else, but he does get credit for it. )

Nonetheless, despite his endless, futile begging for the Nobel Peace Prize, let’s not pretend that he is some kind of peacenik who has made the world a safer place. This was a man who ran for office the first time promising to torture prisoners while extolling the virtues of capital punishment and summary executions. Since then he has excused Neo-Nazis and defended the Confederacy. He restored the federal death penalty racing to execute as many people as he can before he leaves office. He banned citizens of Muslim countries from coming to the US, put children in cages and pardoned a series of war criminals, sending a pretty strong signal to the world that the US has become a rogue superpower that ignores common decency and international law.

Trump may not have started up a new war overseas but he sure as hell waged one at home, using propaganda techniques, technology and a non-stop barrage of lies and lurid demagoguery. He demonized immigrants and racial minorities, portrayed Democrats as evil and the free press as enemies of the people.

In fact, he did start a “foreign” war, by turning Americans who didn’t support him and allies who’d betrayed him into alien invaders.

He built up that theme during his entire term, portraying his political rivals as criminals and encouraging his rally-goers to chant “lock her up!” He claimed that Democratic Party-run states were undeserving of federal assistance during disasters and clearly favored his own voters in Republican-led states, both rhetorically and materially. He relentlessly degraded and demeaned his political opponents always insisting he was just “fighting back.”

When the country exploded in protest last summer over the endless police killings of unarmed Black men, Trump responded by trying to call up the military and demanding that authorities “dominate” the protesters. After a vigilante who believed he was called to help the cops protect the streets killed three people in Kenosha Wisconsin, Trump proclaimed that to stop the violence “we must also confront the radical ideology that includes this violence.” There was no doubt who he was talking about. In one epic Twitter flurry on August 30th, Trump insulted Joe Biden, retweeted a call to imprison New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, went after CNN and NPR and strongly implied that protesters were forming a coup to take over his government.

Throughout his term, he behaved as if Democrats, immigrants, Black Lives Matter protesters, Blue state residents, etc. had seized the country from Real Americans — Trump voters. Since the election, he inundated the nation with the Big Lie that the election was stolen and on January 6th, his “very fine” followers stormed the US Capitol believing they were seizing it back.

So yes, Donald Trump is a war president, one of the most notorious in our history. The five people killed at the U.S. Capitol are combat casualties and since one of his main reasons for failing to properly respond to the pandemic was the desire to blame Blue State governors for the death toll, we can add a fair number of the 400,000 dead Americans to his body count.Advertisement:

When Richard Nixon resigned and Al Gore conceded, the usual talking heads and gasbags all smugly reassured the nation that everything was just fine because there were no tanks on the corner and no soldiers in the streets proving the system worked.

How’s that working out for us this time? 

Salon

They’re going to try to erase him

This piece by McCay Coppins on the Republicans’ plan to move past the Trump era is exactly right: they are going to try to pretend it never happened.

As Donald Trump lurches through the disastrous final days of his presidency, Republicans are just beginning to survey the wreckage of his reign. Their party has been gutted, their leader is reviled, and after four years of excusing every presidential affront to “conservative values,” their credibility is shot. How will the GOP recover from the complicity and corruption of the Trump era? To many Republicans, the answer is simple: Pretend it never happened.

“We’re about to see a whole political party do a large-scale version of ‘New phone, who dis?’” says Sarah Isgur, a former top spokesperson for the Trump Justice Department. “It will be like that boyfriend you should never have dated—the mistake that shall not be mentioned.”

The plan might seem implausible, but I’ve heard it floated repeatedly in recent days by Republican strategists who are counting down the minutes of the Trump presidency. The hardcore MAGA crowd will stay loyal, of course, and those few who have consistently opposed Trump will escape with their reputations intact. But for the majority of GOP officials, apparatchiks, and commentators who sacrificed their dignity at the altar of Trump, a collective case of amnesia seems destined to set in the moment he leaves office.

People who spent years coddling the president will recast themselves as voices of conscience, or whitewash their relationship with Trump altogether. Policy makers who abandoned their dedication to “fiscal responsibility” and “limited government” will rediscover a passion for these timeless conservative principles. Some may dress up their revisionism in the rhetoric of “healing” and “moving forward,” but the strategy will be clear—to escape accountability by taking advantage of America’s notoriously short political memory.

When I asked Doug Heye, a longtime GOP strategist, how his party will remember the Trump years, he responded with a litany of episodes to memory-hole. “Republicans will want to forget the constant chaos, the lies, the double-dealing, the hiring of family, and the escalating rhetoric that incited hate for four years [and] directly led to what happened at the Capitol,” he told me. “Basically, any of those things that we never would have let an Obama or Clinton get away with, but constantly justified to ourselves in the name of judges.”

But while some Republicans might be eager to “walk away from Trump,” Heye added, “many will continue talking about the things in the administration they supported”—from tax cuts and deregulation to flooding the judiciary with conservatives.

Indeed, the narrative now forming in some GOP circles presents Trump as a secondary figure who presided over an array of important accomplishments thanks to the wisdom and guidance of the Republicans in his orbit. In these accounts, Trump’s race-baiting, corruption, and cruel immigration policies—not to mention his attempts to overturn an election—are treated as minor subplots, rather than defining features.

Alyssa Farah, who worked for more than three years in the Trump White House as a communications adviser, resigned last month after the president refused to concede the election. She’s spent the past couple of weeks condemning Trump’s conspiracy theories and distancing herself from the havoc they’ve wrought. Still, when we spoke, Farah was eager to highlight America’s booming pre-coronavirus economy as proof of concept for traditional conservative policies. She lamented that Trump’s legacy might be defined by “the final days of it”—that is, the violent insurrection he incited and the re-impeachment it provoked—but she told me that Republicans shouldn’t “throw the baby out with the bathwater.”

Hoping to provoke a slightly more introspective assessment of the president she served, I asked Farah how she thought the Trump era would be written about in history books. After thinking for a moment, she suggested that this period might not be remembered for Trump at all, but rather for the “once-in-a-hundred-years pandemic” that happened to occur on his watch.

There’s no guarantee Trump will go along, of course.. He needs attention and lives for revenge. He may not be willing to let them move on even if they want to. But they will try. And if the media lets them get away with it, it will work too.

It’s happened in the past after all. Think about Mike Pence (Mike Pence!) carrying on about how Trump avoided wars after spending more than a decade pimping the war on terror. This is what they always do. Eventually they will disavow Trump too, although that will have to wait a bit to see where he ends up and how long it takes his cult members to deprogram. But you can bet their plan is to toss this whole ugly, UnAmerican nightmare down the memory hole.

Republicans will insist that any mention of their perfidy is “old news” and accuse those who bring it up of not wanting to move the country forward. They will turn on the sanctimony so hard it will give you a migraine.

One group that doesn’t seem ready to let these people rewrite their history is the Never Trumpers:

Terry Sullivan, who ran Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign in 2016, told me he was unimpressed by this sudden rush to righteous indignation. “The newfound outrage from former Trump supporters rings a bit hollow, given how quiet most were during Charlottesville and countless other escapades,” he said. “Forty-seven months of blind loyalty followed by one month of conscience doesn’t earn you much more than the Mick Mulvaney profile-in-courage award.”

Sullivan was less certain, though, about whether the revisionism would work. “I don’t expect the voters will treat them any more kindly than the historians—but I’ve been wrong before.” After all, some predicted that the Republicans who worked for George W. Bush, especially the architects of the Iraq War, would be shunned once he left office. Instead, many of them have settled into respectable—and lucrative—perches as commentators, lobbyists, and elder statesmen. As long as the cable-news bookers keep calling, redemption is always available.  

That is a possibility. Consider that some of these networks kept some of these liars on the air all during the Trump years. (I’m looking at you Chuck Todd and your pal Hugh Hewitt.) People should scream about it on social media if they do it. It does bother them to be publicly chastised.

This is why it’s so important for there to be investigations and accountability for what has gone down these last four years. If they fail to do it, the Republicans will simply reset as if nothing happened … and then they’ll do it again. Why wouldn’t they?