huckelberry wrote:I do not see how starting an impeachment drive now will accomplish anything good. I do not see how it will protect the constitution or democracy. I see futile grandstanding signifying nothing.
1) Trump has committed impeachable offenses and people in Congress have a professional duty to address them through the Constitutional mechanism afforded them to do so.
2) Aside from the ethical obligation, by failure to do this, it gives license for Trump to continue to commit and expand upon impeachable offenses. It also gives future presidents a belief that they may do so as well. It is a profound moral hazard. Once presidents believe they can behave without lawful restraint so long as they have 34 people in the Senate politically backing them, dictatorship is just a matter of time. It will be sooner rather than later. You have to at least
attempt to maximize risk for extreme misconduct from a president.
Second Amendment) Given Trump's current and past behavior, this includes actions that affect whether democracy itself can function. If there isn't scrutiny, you are increasing the odds Trump's team will encourage criminal behavior to tilt elections in their favor. They have shown they are not above this. They may do it anyway, but we should at least
try to stop them.
3) It will bring to public attention just what Trump has done. You may assume that this is widely known, but it isn't, because it's a complicated subject and right-wing propaganda has a vast hold on public attention that obscures criticisms of Republican actions. By having impeachment hearings and the direct, extensive media attention this brings, you very well might create public pressure that will "accomplish something" such as increasing electoral pressure on those who block attempts to remove Trump from office. Public opinion didn't turn against Nixon until after there were impeachment hearings outlining just what he did, which at this point is child's play compared to the Trump admin.