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Showing Original Post only (View all)538 "With Trump's Acquittal, The Fragility Of America's Democracy Is Even More Clear" [View all]
Last edited Sun Feb 14, 2021, 01:17 PM - Edit history (1)
By Perry Bacon Jr.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/with-trumps-acquittal-the-fragility-of-americas-democracy-is-even-more-clear/
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What happened on Jan. 6 and the days leading up to it an American president spending weeks trying to reverse the results of a free and fair election, culminating in his supporters storming the U.S. Capitol to try to keep him in power by force was so shocking that it seemed at least possible (if unlikely) that it would break the pattern. Could Republicans stick with Trump again? And if they did, wouldnt Democrats try to shame GOP senators as much as possible?
But by the time we got to Feb. 13, less than six weeks after the attack on the Capitol, it was obvious that nothing had fundamentally changed. Democrats, fully aware that there werent nearly enough GOP votes to convict Trump, opted against calling any witnesses and, in less than a week, wrapped up Trumps second impeachment trial, stemming from one of the most terrible incidents in recent American history. In the end, only seven of the 50 Republican senators voted to convict Trump of the charge of incitement of insurrection, joining all 50 Democrats. The 57 votes against Trump versus the 43 GOP votes to acquit fell short of the two-thirds needed per the Constitution to convict. Trump was acquitted. He can run for president again. And, at least for now, he remains an influential figure in the Republican Party and therefore American politics overall.
In some ways, its as though Jan. 6 never happened Trump is a fairly unpopular, impeached, one-term president who still retains a deep base of support among Republican voters. Trump and his brand of politics may be politically damaged, but theyre not going anywhere. How did we end up in a situation where not much has changed? Well, the big story of the weeks since Jan. 6 is simple: The GOP base stuck with Trump. Even before the attack at the Capitol, some top Republicans, most notably Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, were ready for the party to move on from Trump, viewing him as a drag on the GOPs electoral prospects (since Trumps election in 2016, Republicans lost the House, the Senate and the presidency, in part due to voter backlash against Trump). In an alternate reality, Jan. 6 might have both strengthened the resolve of the party to dump Trump and also ease that break, since Republican lawmakers could argue that of course they were uncomfortable with a president whose supporters invaded the Capitol.
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But the results of this trial mean that both threats remain. Many of the people who invaded the Capitol have been arrested, and many of them are likely to serve time in jail. But it appears that none of the politicians who propagated the falsehoods about election fraud in 2020 setting the conditions for the insurrection will face any serious repercussions at all. Thats most notably Trump, but also figures like Sen. John Hawley. Whats to stop Republican officials in 2022 or 2024 from making up frivolous charges of election fraud and then watching as conservative voters take aggressive and even violent actions because they believe what prominent Republicans are saying?
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lots more at the link - all worth reading
(I guess I don't share the optimism that some other DUers are discussing today - I think that we are deeply screwed because there have been no consequences for propagation of the BIG LIE and what happened on Jan 6 - and the BIG LIE continues to be propagated - meaning the cult is still out there).