Tuesday, February 09, 2021

Convict Trump

Adam Kinzinger isn't popular among his fellow elected Republicans. That's because he doesn't mince words. He believes that DonaldTrump should be convicted of encouraging an insurrection:

It’s a matter of accountability. If the GOP doesn’t take a stand, the chaos of the past few months, and the past four years, could quickly return. The future of our party and our country depends on confronting what happened — so it doesn’t happen again.

The immediate cause for Trump’s impeachment was Jan. 6. But the president’s rally and resulting riot on Capitol Hill didn’t come out of nowhere. They were the result of four-plus years of anger, outrage and outright lies. Perhaps the most dangerous lie — or at least the most recent — was that the election was stolen. Of course it wasn’t, but a huge number of Republican leaders encouraged the belief that it was. Every time that lie was repeated, the riots of Jan. 6 became more likely.

Unless Republicans convict Trump, Kinzinger believes his party --  and the republic -- have no future:

Impeachment offers a chance to say enough is enough. It ought to force every American, regardless of party affiliation, to remember not only what happened on Jan. 6, but also the path that led there. After all, the situation could get much, much worse — with more violence and more division that cannot be overcome. The further down this road we go, the closer we come to the end of America as we know it.

The GOP that inspired me to serve in uniform and then run for public office believed a brighter future was just around the bend. We stood for equal opportunity, firm in our conviction that a poor kid from the South Side of Chicago deserves the same shot as a privileged kid from Highland Park. We knew that if we brought everyone into America’s promise, we would unleash a new era of American progress and prosperity. Outrage and the fear of a darker future were nowhere to be found in that Republican Party.

When leaders such as Donald Trump changed that dynamic, many of my fellow Republicans went along without question. Many are still there because they believe the rank-and-file Republican voter is there, too.

But Kinzinger believes that most voters aren't where Republicans think they are:

Since my vote to impeach Trump, I’ve heard from tens of thousands of my constituents. Their reaction has been overwhelmingly supportive. Republicans of all backgrounds and outlooks have told me they appreciate my efforts to return the GOP to a foundation of principle, not personality. I’ve even heard from many Democrats. They don’t agree with me on a lot of issues, but they want the Republican Party to be healthy and competitive.

Sadly, Kinzinger is almost a majority of one in his party. But, at least, when he walks, he is proudly upright.

Image: GovTrack.us

6 comments:

Lorne said...

While I applaud Kinzinger's integrity in voting for impeachment, Owen, his assertion that the GOP stood for equal opportunity until Trump and his ilk came along seems more like nostalgia for a long-ago time than reality.

Owen Gray said...

I agree, Lorne. That's what the Party of Lincoln stood for. But it's been a long time since the Republican Party was the Party of Lincoln.

The Disaffected Lib said...


At times it feels like being in an open boat with a slow leak. It's worrisome but you know that, eventually, it will go under. Our ultimate coping mechanism, fatalism, comes into play for those unable to cling to distraction and denialism.

I try to imagine what might cause the American people to rally and get out from under this malaise but I don't see any solution, do you? Just pondering it gets you into a confusion of causation. What were the triggers? In what order? Is this the emergence of something once safely suppressed like the genie in the bottle? How much weight can this republic bear before it breaks?

Owen Gray said...

There have been people like Trump before, Mound. But this time the disease is so widespread and so deeply rooted that it's hard to see a recovery in the future.

John's aghast said...

Don't be so negative! If we're lucky, Climate Change and the virus will knock off all the gullabillies and give us (them) another chance at civilization, as we wish to know it. I have to admit that I'm not overly optimistic though.
At least Kinzinger's approach leads one to have hope.

Owen Gray said...

You would think that all those anti-maskers would succumb to the virus, John. But some life forms -- like cockroaches -- can survive anything.