24 November 2019
TRENDING

Peggy Noonan, GOP loyalist - Trump’s defenders have no defense.

Voices4America
Voices4America


Look, the case has been made. Al­most every­thing in the im­peach­ment hear­ings this week fleshed out and backed up the charge that Pres­i­dent Trump mus­cled Ukraine for po­lit­i­cal gain. The pend­ing ques­tion is what pre­cisely the House and its De­mo­c­ra­tic ma­jor­ity will de­cide to in­clude in the ar­ti­cles of im­peach-ment, what statutes or stan­dards they will as­sert the pres­i­dent vi­o­lated.

What was said con­sistently un­der­mined Mr. Trump's case, but more deadly was what has never been said. In the two months since Speaker Nancy Pelosi an­nounced a for­mal im­peachment in­quiry was un­der way and the two weeks since the In­tel­li­gence Com­mit­tee's pub­lic hear­ings be­gan, no one, even in the White House, has said any­thing like, "He wouldn't do that!" or "That would be so un­like him." His best friends know he would do it and it's ex­actly like him.

What was said con­sistently un­der­mined Mr. Trump's case, but more deadly was what has never been said. In the two months since Speaker Nancy Pelosi an­nounced a for­mal im­peach-ment in­quiry was un­der way and the two weeks since the In­tel­li­gence Com­mit­tee's pub­lic hear­ings be­gan, no one, even in the White House, has said any­thing like, "He wouldn't do that!" or "That would be so un­like him." His best friends know he would do it and it's ex­actly like him.

Lt. Col. Alexan­der Vin­dman was not a per­sua­sive wit­ness and did not move the story for­ward, be­cause in spite of the ob­vi­ous pa­tri­o-tism re­flected in his record he was an­noy­ing—smug and full of him­self. He ap­peared in full dress uni­form with three rows of rib­bons. When Rep. Devin Nunes called him "Mr. Vin­dman," he quickly cor­rected him: "Rank­ing Mem­ber, it's Lieu­tenant Colonel Vin­d­man, please." Oh, snap. As he de­scribed his ar­eas of au­thority at the Na­tional Se­cu­rity Coun­cil, he seemed to glis­ten with self-re­gard. You got the im­pres­sion he saw him­self as fully in charge of U.S. pol­icy to­ward Ukraine. Asked if it was true that gov­ern­ment of­fered to make him their de­fense min­is­ter he said "yes" with no ap­par­ent em­bar­rass-ment. I don't know about you but I don't like it when a for­eign gov­ern­ment gets a sense of a U.S. mil­i­tary of­fi­cer and con­cludes he might fit right in. (A Ukrain­ian of­fi­cial later said the job of­fer was a joke.)

Mr. Vin­d­man—I'm sorry, Lt. Col. Vin­d­man—self-val­orized, as other wit­nesses have, and tugged in his open­ing state­ment on Amer­ica's heart strings by ad­dress­ing his fa­ther, who brought his fam­ily from the So­viet Union 40 years ago: "Dad, . . . you made the right de­ci­sion. . . . Do not worry, I will be fine for telling the truth."

The com­mit­tee has paid en­tirely too much at­ten­tion to the wit­nesses' emo­tions. "How did that make you feel?" "With­out up­set­ting you too much, I'd like to show you the ex­cerpts from the call . . ."

I am sure the ques­tion­ers were told to take this tack by com­mu­ni­ca­tions pro­fes­sion­als who be­lieve this is how you ma­nip­u­late house­wives. In fact a mother at home with a vac­uum in one hand and a cry­ing baby in the other would look at them, lis­ten, and think: "You guys rep­re­sent us to other coun­tries? You gotta butch up."

Later, as Col. Vin­d­man re­turned to work, and clearly want­ing to be seen, he posed grin­ning for pho­tos in front of the Eisen­hower Ex­ec­u­tive Of­fice Build­ing.

It is not only Don­ald Trump who suf­fers from Ab­sence of Grav­ity.

On Wednes­day Gor­don Sond­land, the am­bas­sador to the Eu­ropean Union, was both weirdly jolly and enor­mously ef­fec­tive in do­ing Mr. Trump dam­age. He fol­lowed the pres­i-dent's or­ders; there was a quid pro quo; "every­one was in the loop, it was no se­cret"; Rudy Giu­liani was the point man, with whom Mr. Sond­land worked "at the ex­press di­rec­tion of the pres­i­dent."

It was his third try at truth­ful sworn tes­ti­mony and it was com­pletely be­liev­able. It was kind of the ball­game. He seemed like a guy with noth­ing to lose, or maybe a guy who'd al­ready lost much.

On Thurs­day Fiona Hill, the for­mer White House Rus­sia ex­pert, was all business, a se­ri­ous woman you don't want to mess with. She re­ori­ented things, warn­ing that those who ex­cuse or don't wish to see Russ­ian pro­pa­ganda ef­forts against Amer­ica, and tar­get­ing its elec­tions, are miss­ing the ob­vi­ous. The sus­pi­cion of the pres­i­dent and his al­lies that Ukraine is the great cul­prit in the 2016 elec­tion is a "fic-tional nar­ra­tive." They are, in fact, bow­ing to dis­in­for­ma­tion Rus­sia spreads to cover its tracks and con­fuse the Amer­i­can peo­ple and its po­lit­i­cal class. She dis­missed the pres­i­dent's op­er­a­tives' ef­forts to get Ukraine's new pres­i­dent to in­ves­ti­gate his coun­try's al­leged med­dling as a "do­mes­tic po­lit­i­cal er­rand." She and other diplo­mats were "in­volved in na­tional se­cu­rity, for­eign pol­icy," and the in­ter­ests of the op­er­a­tives and the diplo­mats had "di­verged." She warned Mr. Sond­land: "This is all go­ing to blow up."

Truer words.

What be­came ob­vi­ous in the hear­ings was the sober tes­ti­mony from re­spectable diplo­mats—not dis­grun­tled staffers with nutty mem­oirs but peo­ple of stature who don't or­di­nar­ily talk—about how the ad­min­is­tra­tion op­er­ates. It be­came clear in a new and pub­lic way that pretty much every­one around the pres­i­dent has been forced for three years to work around his poor judg­ment and un­pre­dictabil­ity in or­der to do their jobs. He no doubt knows this and no doubt doesn't care. Be­cause he's the boss, they'll do it his way.

But we saw how dam­ag­ing this is, how ul­ti­mately de­structive, not only to co­her­ence and re­spectabil­ity but to the pres­i­dent him­self.

Af­ter Thurs­day's hear­ings I felt some free-float­ing sym­pa­thy for high Trump ap­pointees who joined early. You can say they knew what they signed up for, but it's hu­man to have hope, and they surely had it when they came aboard. They were no doubt am­bi­tious—they wanted a big job—but they prob­a­bly wanted to do good, too. They were op­ti­mistic—"How bad can it be?" And there would have been van­ity—"I can han­dle him." But they couldn't. He not only doesn't know where the line is; he has never wanted to know, so he can cross it with im­punity, with­out con­scious­ness of a bad act or one that might put him in dan­ger. They were no match for his un­pre­dictabil­ity and re­sent­ments, which at any mo­ment could undo any­thing.

As to im­peach­ment it­self, the case has been so clearly made you won­der what ex­actly the Sen­ate will be left do­ing. How will they hold a lengthy trial with a case this clear? Who ex­actly will be the pres­i­dent's wit­nesses, those who'd tes­tify he didn't do what he ap­pears to have done, and would never do it?

Pro­ce­dures, rules and de­f­i­n­i­tions aren't fully worked out in the Sen­ate. But we are ap­proach­ing De­cem­ber and the clock is tick­ing. A full-blown trial on charges most every­one will be­lieve are true, and with an elec­tion in less than a year, will seem ab­surd to all but diehards and do the coun­try no good.

So the rea­son­able guess is Re­pub­li­can sen­a­tors will call to let the peo­ple de­cide. In a di­vided coun­try this is the right call. But they should take se­ri­ously the idea of cen­sur­ing him for abuse of power. Mr. Trump would be the first pres­i­dent to be cen­sured since An­drew Jack­son, to whom his the­o­rists have al­ways compared him. In the end he will prob­a­bly be proud of a tight­ening of the con­nec­tion.

Peggy Noonan, Reagan speechwriter and GOP loyalist, wrote this in the WSJ. November 21, 2019

###

Voices4America Post Script. Peggy Noonan, Reagan speechwriter and GOP loyalist, wrote “As to im­peach­ment it­self, the case has been so clearly made.” Noonan is a piece of work, but even she saw what Trump did. Will any other GOPers come to reality? She wants a different result but she sees!#AbuseOfPower #Bribery #TrumpCriminality #ImpeachRemove


Other Articles

TRENDING
Annette Niemtzow

The fight for Democracy continues in Wisconsin. The elections are on February 21.

11 February 2023
TRENDING
Annette Niemtzow

Video and transcript of the State of the Union, plus a summary by Heather Cox Richardson.

08 February 2023
On Social
Eric Swalwell

Ask yourself something: are you willing to pay higher taxes and have less affordable health care so you can “own the libs” because that’s the price you’ll have to pay if the GOP agenda is enacted … you pay more, their cronies pay less.

06 February 2023
On Social
Congressman Maxwell Alejandro Frost

I’m excited to join @ProChoiceCaucus as Freshman Leader! With Roe protections gone and Governor Ron DeSantis and the Florida legislature passing one of the harshest abortion bans in the nation, my home state has been on the frontlines of the battle for reproductive freedom.

06 February 2023