THE REPUBLICANS HAVE ALWAYS SLAMMED THE DEMOCRATS. HASN’T NANCY PELOSI HEARD OF TIT FOR TAT?
NANCY PELOSI: No matter how reprehensible one considers Bill Clinton’s actions to have been in the Monica Lewinsky case, they dwarf (what an understatement!) in comparison to the actions of Donald Trump. The Republicans impeached Clinton and then moved to remove him from office. Hasn’t Pelosi heard of tit for tat?
Similarly, Mitch McConnell, Republican leader of the Senate, has
stated that if a Supreme Court vacancy occurs in 2020, the Republicans would
fill it – the exact opposite of what the party did in 2016 with the argument
that regardless of who President Obama chooses to fill the Court’s vacancy, let
voters decided at the polls, thus leaving the Court with only 8 justices and
without the possibility of breaking a tie. Why didn’t the Democrats mobilize
the public against such an outrageous maneuver? And with such double standards,
why don’t they call McConnell out for what he is: a hypocrite.
Why is the “consensus” mantra for Democratic centrists from Obama
to Joe Biden always the same even though it proves to be so disastrous? The
answer is simple. What the Democratic Party leadership most fears is that an
emotional struggle would invigorate and activate the Democratic Party base and
create a groundswell which would move U.S. politics in a leftist direction. Impeachment procedures would harden the position of the Democratic Party toward the Republicans and place on center stage those Democrats like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) who defend principled positions and oppose the strategy of consensus with the Republican Party at all costs.
A similar move to the left and polarization would have occurred had the recently elected President Obama in 2009 accused Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and company of crimes against humanity for the torture that they permitted, if not ordered, in the case of black site prisons throughout the world. Similarly, after the Democrats came back in 2006 and public opinion turned against Bush’s war in Iraq, Nancy Pelosi, then recently elected Speaker of the House, ruled out impeachment procedures against the President.
A similar move to the left and polarization would have occurred had the recently elected President Obama in 2009 accused Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and company of crimes against humanity for the torture that they permitted, if not ordered, in the case of black site prisons throughout the world. Similarly, after the Democrats came back in 2006 and public opinion turned against Bush’s war in Iraq, Nancy Pelosi, then recently elected Speaker of the House, ruled out impeachment procedures against the President.
In considering Pelosi’s position on impeachment, one has to imagine
what people looking back on the Trump administration ten or more years from now
will think. They will ask was there no moral outrage in the U.S. to what Trump
has done and said? Why wasn’t there a complete repudiation of Trump and everything
he stands for from U.S. citizens and the U.S. establishment?
What are the Democratic centrists afraid of? They foresee a
scenario in which a mobilized public would give rise to a left-wing pole within
or outside of the party. Moving the Democratic Party to the left would dry up funding
from powerful economic groups amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. And
eventually it would pull the rug out from under the centrists. Another possible
scenario is that the rift within the Democratic Party would reach the breaking
point, giving rise to a third party on the left which would draw voters not
from the Republican Party but from the Democrats. The Democrats have much
more to lose from such a scenario than the Republicans.
All this is not idle speculation. Pelosi’s decision to oppose
impeachment proceedings has a definite explanation and it has to do with the
fear of the rise of a leftist pole, be it within the Democratic Party or from
without (most likely the latter). Pelosi didn’t get to where she is without
being shrewd and calculating. And the fact is that these scenarios are not possibilities for the long-term future. The rise of Bernie Sanders and AOC represents a major threat to the Democratic Party centrists.
Regardless of the ideological mindset of U.S. voters, the issues that the Sanders-AOC bloc raises have for a long time represented their beliefs and aspirations. And there
is every indication that the end result of the rise of Sanders and AOC will be the
emergence of a new left party which would put an end to the U.S.’s two-party
system. The fact that Bernie Sanders won Democratic Party primaries in 2016 in
states where independents can vote in primaries is telling. AOC, for her part, lacks
influence in the leadership of the Democratic Party, but she speaks to the
aspirations of ordinary U.S. voters both in and out of the party. To sum up,
the issue playing out within the Democratic Party regarding Trump’s impeachment
has far-reaching implications, which Nancy Pelosi is fully aware of.
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