In Private, Republicans Admit They Acquitted Trump Out of Fear.
One journalist remarked to me, How in the world can these senators walk around here upright when they have no backbone?
By Sherrod Brown
Not guilty. Not guilty.
In the United States Senate, like in many spheres of life, fear does the business.
Think back to the fall of 2002, just a few weeks before that years crucial midterm elections, when the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq was up for a vote. A year after the 9/11 attacks, hundreds of members of the House and the Senate were about to face the voters of a country still traumatized by terrorism.
Senator Patty Murray, a thoughtful Democrat from Washington State, still remembers the fear that dominated the Senate leading up to the Iraq war.
You could feel it then, she told me, and you can feel that fear now chiefly among Senate Republicans.
For those of us who, from the start, questioned the wisdom of the Iraq war, our sense of isolation surely wasnt much different from the loneliness felt in the 1950s by Senator Herbert Lehman of New York, who confronted Joe McCarthys demagogy only to be abandoned by so many of his colleagues. Nor was it so different from what Senator George McGovern must have felt when he announced his early opposition to the Vietnam War and was then labeled a traitor by many inside and outside of Congress.
History has indeed taught us that when it comes to the instincts that drive us, fear has no rival. As the lead House impeachment manager, Representative Adam Schiff, has noted, Robert Kennedy spoke of how moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle.
Playing on that fear, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, sought a quick impeachment trial for President Trump with as little attention to it as possible. Reporters, who usually roam the Capitol freely, have been cordoned off like cattle in select areas. Mr. McConnell ordered limited camera views in the Senate chamber so only presenters not absent senators could be spotted.
And barely a peep from Republican lawmakers.
One journalist remarked to me, How in the world can these senators walk around here upright when they have no backbone?
Fear has a way of bending us.
Late in the evening on day four of the trial I saw it, just 10 feet across the aisle from my seat at Desk 88, when House Manager Adam Schiff told the Senate: CBS News reported last night that a Trump confidant said that Republican senators were warned, Vote against the president and your head will be on a pike. The response from Republicans was immediate and furious. Several Republican senators groaned and protested and muttered, not true. But pike or no pike, Mr. Schiff had clearly struck a nerve. (In the words of Lizzo: truth hurts.)
Of course, the Republican senators who have covered for Mr. Trump love what he delivers for them. But Vice President Mike Pence would give them the same judges, the same tax cuts, the same attacks on workers rights and the environment. So thats not really the reason for their united chorus of not guilty.
For the stay-in-office-at-all-cost representatives and senators, fear is the motivator. They are afraid that Mr. Trump might give them a nickname like Low Energy Jeb and Lyin Ted, or that he might tweet about their disloyalty. Or worst of all that he might come to their state to campaign against them in the Republican primary. They worry:
Will the hosts on Fox attack me?'>>>
https://www.sherrodbrown.com/frontpage/2020/new-york-times-in-private-republicans-admit-they-acquitted-trump-out-of-fear/?
Cousin Dupree
(1,866 posts)Mr. Loopner was an unseen character on an old SNL skit. Poor Mr. Loopner was born without a spine.
Laelth
(32,017 posts)Here's "Cousin Boneless" from Cow and Chicken.
-Laelth