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4 Reasons McConnell’s Terrible Impeachment Blunder Is Doomed To Failure
The Federalist ^ | 01/14/2021 | Christopher Bedford

Posted on 01/14/2021 10:37:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made a terrible mistake Tuesday night when he released word that he was in favor of impeaching President Donald Trump. This mistake goes well beyond a simple political miscalculation. It is the physical manifestation of Washington Republican hubris, wrapped in a fog of frightened groupthink.

Announced the eve of the House impeachment vote in the pages of The New York Times, McConnell’s plan reportedly rested on the belief that impeaching the outgoing president “will make it easier to purge Mr. Trump from the party.” Published just after the No. 3 House Republican, Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney, announced her intention to vote for impeachment, for a moment it appeared the still-Republican Senate might end up joining with the Democrats after all.

By early afternoon the following day, however, the situation on the ground had changed. By the time the sun set in Washington, only 10 of 195 House Republicans — or about 5 percent — had joined with Democrats. Meanwhile, conservative members of the House had begun whipping support for Cheney’s resignation from leadership; and nervous Republican senators were publicly turning against impeachment. Retreating, McConnell declared he no longer knew which way he would vote, and in a statement suggested the Senate might not be able to take up the trial on time after all.

And just like that, McConnell (and Cheney’s) plan to purge the party of the new populist right appears to have unraveled. So how did the worst laid plans of mice and Mitch go so quickly to pieces?

First, the rollout. House Republicans and most senators were caught completely off guard by McConnell’s reported change of heart. While it’s not wise to thumbtack plans to purge the party on the events bulletin board in the hall, Republicans are not accustomed to taking orders to march on their own voters from a newspaper that hates them all — and aren’t prepared to do so now.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, meanwhile, appears to have been caught by surprise by McConnell’s sneak attack, leaving him incapable of whipping House votes even if he’d had the time or inclination to do so. There’s no evidence he had either. Remember, the rank and file of Congress has changed: More than 40 percent of the D.C. GOP has been elected since Trump was the Republican nominee.

This alone didn’t mean that McConnell couldn’t lead impeachment proceedings against the president anyway: Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi already had the numbers to impeach Trump with only Democratic votes. It did, however, send a strong message to Republican senators that the move to knife the man who had just won more votes than any Republican in history was no unified front. And now, it was a vote against nearly 95 percent of their House colleagues.

Second, the plan. McConnell’s plan was a very, very stupid plan; the kind more typically floated by a Politico reporter whose only friends work for Pelosi than by a veteran senator with a reputation for strategically doing nothing in the face of Democratic pressure to make a move.

As Ben Domenech explained in Wednesday morning’s issue of The Transom, the plan here would seriously threaten to rip the party “apart while dramatically increasing the likelihood that Donald Trump forms a third party — something his supporters would overwhelmingly welcome.”

“Eleventh hour impeachment functionally,” he added, “is an act of condemnation less for the president and more for the two-thirds of Republicans who still support him. It tells them they were wrong to cheer and clap and knock on doors and wave flags and make signs and drive in parades. It tells them CNN was right all along.”

Winning message right there, guys. Good plan.

Third, the voters. Trump’s voters are still here. Sure, no longer 74 million of them, but a lot more than it takes to give the majority of DC’s GOP the Georgia treatment. And many of them remember the events of the last four years well.

In Washington, bad memories can fade mercifully fast. A number of people I spoke with Tuesday night hadn’t thought of the leftwing mob’s August attack on the White House in months despite having been there, for example, until a Federalist article that morning drew out that fearful night like some kind of repressed memory therapy.

“Oh yeah,” some thought: “The attack on the Capitol is not the first time a politically goaded mob had violently attacked a sacred symbol of the republic — even if it is the first time CNN has cared.”

A lot of voters, however, did not bury the memory. Americans have been forced to suffer fringe left-wing violence since before Trump even won the nomination. This Inauguration Day will mark the four-year anniversary of Washington riots that left cars burning in the streets. What’s novel here is the reaction of America’s elites, which brings us to the final point.

The left. Since last week’s disgusting attack on the American Capitol, the titans of tech have decided to disenfranchise 74 million American Trump supporters. Not content with merely cancelling Instagram and Twitter accounts, they’ve targeted online payment systems and the very existence of websites they deem objectionable on little-to-no actual evidence of wrongdoing.

We’re beyond censorship now, folks. There’s a new system coming to big cities and small towns alike — and there’s no room for conservatives in it. Why, exactly, is this happening after years of tolerated and often celebrated political violence? Because this time, the mob wore red hats.

Amid this incredible assault on basic freedoms, McConnell and Co. hatched a plan: He would tell The New York Times to announce the Republican impeachment of President Donald Trump. It was not a very good plan, but there will be others. The populist right is still alive and well, and that, the likes of Cheney and McConnell cannot abide.


Christopher Bedford is a senior editor at The Federalist, the vice chairman of Young Americans for Freedom, a board member at the National Journalism Center, and the author of The Art of the Donald.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: antifa; bendomenech; blacklivesmatter; capitolriot; cnn; democrat; donaldtrump; facebook; failure; fakenews; impeachment; instagram; jezebel; joebiden; lizcheney; mcconnell; nancypelousi; parler; propaganda; rnc; senate; siliconvalley; stripe; thenewyorkslimes; thetransom; twitter
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1 posted on 01/14/2021 10:37:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The GOPe hates us more than the Democrats hate us.


2 posted on 01/14/2021 10:39:43 AM PST by brownsfan (The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Fake news


3 posted on 01/14/2021 10:42:46 AM PST by Sacajaweau
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To: brownsfan

I think it’s pretty clear you have Pence, Mcconnell and others.

Pence will never hold another political office.

There should be a petition to oust McConnell now.


4 posted on 01/14/2021 10:43:12 AM PST by nikos1121
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To: SeekAndFind
Now that Mitch McConnell's legacy as the man who reshaped the Federal Judiciary is cemented in, he doesn't need Trump anymore and kicks him to the curb.

The Turtle has zero integrity - THAT'S his real legacy.

5 posted on 01/14/2021 10:43:17 AM PST by Psalm 73 ("You'll never hear surf music again" - J. Hendrix)
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To: SeekAndFind
This article is filled with all kinds of supposition.

The author reads a New York Times story and tries to analyze it as if the reporting is accurate.

When I see a NYT headline I assume the story is false -- and in fact deliberately planted there to mislead the readers.

6 posted on 01/14/2021 10:43:55 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: SeekAndFind

“Announced the eve of the House impeachment vote in the pages of The New York Times”

And there you have it.

Fake news.


7 posted on 01/14/2021 10:44:01 AM PST by lowbridge
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To: brownsfan
I don't care how horrifying the next four years is, and I don't care how much the moderators at FR harangue us to vote for whoever the Republican candidate is, if that candidate is GOPe then I will vote third party.
8 posted on 01/14/2021 10:44:19 AM PST by who_would_fardels_bear (This is not my current tagline.)
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To: SeekAndFind

1 reason this article is a blunder.

The author believes what the new york times told him.


9 posted on 01/14/2021 10:45:32 AM PST by lowbridge
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To: Alberta's Child

RE: When I see a NYT headline I assume the story is false — and in fact deliberately planted there to mislead the readers.

So, you’re saying that the report that says McConnell is FOR impeachment and will himself vote to convict Trump is FALSE?

My personal feeling is this — if Mitch were so keen on removing Trump from office, why doesn’t he convene Senate ASAP? Why wait till after Biden is inaugurated making the entire process moot?


10 posted on 01/14/2021 10:47:51 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

My question is, can a former president have a trial in a new Senate session after he has left office?


11 posted on 01/14/2021 10:49:56 AM PST by DownInFlames (Ga)
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To: SeekAndFind

Wasn’t just the NYT reporting this, gang.

FNC and FBC (Lou Dobbs) also reported the exact same thing.

And even if you think it was “fake news”, ask yourselves honestly - do you for ONE SECOND doubt it’s true?

I sure don’t. The Turtle HATES Trump. He HATES Conservatives.

Imminently more than plausible The Turtle wants to “purge” that party of Trump AND his 74M followers.

That said, he apparently isn’t very good at math - because a Republican won’t ever elected as County Dog Catcher if Mitch is successful “purging” even a small fraction of the MAGA voters.


12 posted on 01/14/2021 10:50:28 AM PST by jstolzen
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To: brownsfan

China Mitch handed off impeachment to Schumer. He’s doing POTUS no favors here.


13 posted on 01/14/2021 10:51:18 AM PST by lodi90
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To: Sacajaweau

Fake news?

How did you come to that conclusion?


14 posted on 01/14/2021 10:51:25 AM PST by Colo9250 (Name the Democrat Congressman that assassinated Ashli Babbitt now!)
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To: who_would_fardels_bear

“I don’t care how horrifying the next four years is, and I don’t care how much the moderators at FR harangue us to vote for whoever the Republican candidate is, if that candidate is GOPe then I will vote third party.”

I’m with you. What’s that saying: Doing the same thing and expecting a different result? Insanity.


15 posted on 01/14/2021 10:51:38 AM PST by brownsfan (The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.)
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To: SeekAndFind
And just like that, McConnell (and Cheney’s) plan to purge the party of the new populist right appears to have unraveled. So how did the worst laid plans of mice and Mitch go so quickly to pieces?

It's about our ethics.

Republicans resent that their base holds them to higher standards than the Democrats are held to by their voters.

That puts Republicans in the position of actually having to work for their votes, make promises, and then defend their actions against those promises. These are things their Democrat counterparts don't have to do, and the Republicans hate it.

To them, the double standard is not that the MSM let's the Democrats get away with everything, it's their own voters do not.

-PJ

16 posted on 01/14/2021 10:53:10 AM PST by Political Junkie Too (Freedom of the press is the People's right to publish, not CNN's right to the 1st question.)
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To: SeekAndFind
I think perhaps it's the other way around. I see two possible alternative scenarios:

1. McConnell didn't want to be the guy who convened the Senate trial and presided over the Senate while it voted to acquit Trump but with a majority voting to convict (including 3-4 Republicans). In this scenario, Republicans who might have voted to convict Trump (including sh!tbags like Romney and Murkowski) can play the role of martyrs by simply refusing to convict on the grounds that the President is no longer in office.

2. McConnell wanted a trial but knew he didn't have enough time to do it the right way.

17 posted on 01/14/2021 10:53:14 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: DownInFlames

“My question is, can a former president have a trial in a new Senate session after he has left office?”

The scholars say no.


18 posted on 01/14/2021 10:55:37 AM PST by Swirl
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To: Political Junkie Too
I think most people in Congress -- Democrats and Republicans alike -- are also absolutely outraged to the point of lunacy because of the hilarious side of the Capitol invasion. Trump supporters might be angry, but most of those who sacked the Capitol and had their photos plastered all over the internet actually looked like they were having a good time.

They're trying to paint this as a cross between Benghazi and Fort Sumter because they're humiliated at the optics of having Hagar the Horrible and a bunch of overgrown adolescents take over the Capitol.

19 posted on 01/14/2021 10:57:33 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: Alberta's Child
3-D5-F0447-221-C-42-C7-BBF4-81-DDA22-A6262

GOP Weakness in first Impeachment led to second Impeachment
.



20 posted on 01/14/2021 11:02:43 AM PST by AnthonySoprano (‘)
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