House Dem now sees no 'value' in impeachment, as polls show falling support among independents
Michigan
Democratic Rep. Brenda Lawrence, a prominent supporter of Kamala Harris
who has previously supported the impeachment inquiry into President Trump,
abruptly announced Sunday that she no longer saw any "value" in the
process and called for her fellow Democrats to throw their support
behind a symbolic censure resolution.
Lawrence's about-face came as polls have shown that independents are souring on the idea of impeaching and removing Trump from office, including in critical battleground states like Wisconsin, even as House Democrats aggressively presented their poll-tested "bribery" case against the president over the past two weeks.
"We are so close to an election," Lawrence said Sunday on a Michigan radio program,
noting that Trump stands little chance of being convicted by the
GOP-controlled Senate. "I will tell you, sitting here knowing how
divided this country is, I don't see the value of taking him out of
office. But I do see the value of putting down a marker saying his
behavior is not acceptable. It's in violation of the oath of office of a
president of the United States, and we have to be clear that you cannot
use your power of the presidency to withhold funds to get a foreign
country to investigate an American citizen for your own personal gain.
There's no way around that."
Lawrence continued: "I want him
censured. I want it on the record that the House of Representatives did
their job and they told this president and any president coming behind
him that this is unacceptable behavior and, under our Constitution, we
will not allow it. ... I am a Democrat, but I am an independent United
States of America citizen."
Lawrence occupies a safely Democratic
district that includes eastern Detroit, and her reluctance to move
forward with impeachment suggested that moderate Democrats in swing
districts may also be getting cold feet now that all scheduled hearings
in the probe wrapped up last week.
Recent surveys indicate
that even Democratic voters are losing interest in impeachment.
Meanwhile, 50 percent of independents questioned in an NPR/PBS/Marist poll conducted
Nov. 11-15 did not support impeaching and removing Trump from office,
with just 42 percent backing such a move. That’s a noticeable dip in
support compared with the previous NPR/PBS/Marist poll – conducted the
first week in October – when support stood at 45 percent.
And, a Gallup poll conducted
the first two weeks of November indicated that 45 percent of
independent voters supported impeaching and removing the president –
with 53 percent opposing the move. That’s a switch from October, when
the previous Gallup survey put the split at 53-44 percent.
Michigan Democratic Rep. Brenda Lawrence said she no longer sees
any "value" in impeachment, and called for a censure resolution. (House
of Representatives)
Republicans could also use a Senate trial to turn the tables and damage Democrats politically, should the House vote to impeach.
The Washington Examiner noted that in a radio interview Oct. 4, before support for impeachment fell sharply, Lawrence was far more supportive of the proceedings against the president.
"I
feel strongly that for my legacy, for my time in history, sitting here
at this table with an oath of office to protect this country, to protect
the democracy of the United States of America, I cannot sit silent,
that I must move forward with [impeachment] because this is egregious,"
Lawrence said in October.
The House is now comprised of 431
members, meaning Democrats need 217 yeas to impeach Trump. There are
currently 233 Democrats, so Democrats can only lose 16 of their own and
still impeach the president. 31 House Democrats represent more moderate
districts that Trump carried in 2016.
There
have been signs close to home for Lawrence that Democrats should
consider pulling the ripcord on the impeachment process. In an editorial
last week, The Detroit News wrote that the House "should censure, not impeach" the president.
"Democrats
still don't have the strong case they're seeking to justify removing
President Donald Trump from office," the paper wrote. "Censure amounts
to a public shaming. ... But it also recognizes the offense does not
merit removal from office. That, too, seems appropriate, given the
inconclusive testimony so far."
Earlier
this month, freshman Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich. -- who flipped a GOP
district in 2018 that Trump won by 7 points in 2016 -- told Fox News
that she was tentatively weighing all the evidence.
"My
constituents expect me to make an objective decision," Slotkin said as
the hearings concluded, "not one based on an hour of testimony."
Slotkin went on to acknowledge that launching an impeachment inquiry was a "politically tough thing to do."
The
censure process is not prescribed by the Constitution, and amounts
essentially to a condemnation of conduct, without any substantive
consequence, by a majority vote in either the House or the Senate.
"I don't see the value of taking him out of office. ... I want him censured." — Michigan Democratic Rep. Brenda Lawrence
President Andrew Jackson was
censured in a largely political process by the Senate in 1834, although
it was expunged three years later. Several other U.S. presidents have
been reprimanded by Congress, including Abraham Lincoln, James Buchanan,
and William Howard Taft.
Still, top Democrats have signaled they will go ahead with impeachment, at least for now. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif.,
announced Monday that Democrats "are now preparing a report" for the
House Judiciary Committee, indicating that his panel is wrapping up its
work and that the next phase of the impeachment inquiry is imminent.
Calling
the evidence against the president "overwhelming, unchallenged and
damning," Schiff nevertheless asserted that investigative work would
continue, and left open the possibility that Democrats would hold
additional hearings. But all scheduled public hearings before Schiff's
panel wrapped up on a testy note last week, and no new proceedings are planned.
"As
required under House Resolution 660, the Committees are now preparing a
report summarizing the evidence we have found this far, which will be
transmitted to the Judiciary Committee soon after Congress returns from
the Thanksgiving recess," Schiff wrote in a letter to congressional
colleagues.
He noted that the report "will catalog the instances
of non-compliance with lawful subpoenas as part of our report to the
Judiciary Committee, which will allow that committee to consider whether
an article of impeachment based on obstruction of Congress is warranted
along with an article or articles based on this underlying conduct or
other presidential misconduct. Such obstruction was the basis of the
third article of impeachment against President Richard Nixon."
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