By Patrick Buchanan
Donald Trump has stumbled and fallen, and the establishment is not going to let slip this last opportunity to stomp him and his movement to death. A month ago, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a startling ultimatum: Either Vice President Mike Pence and the Trump Cabinet invoke the 25th Amendment, declare the president “unfit” for office, and remove him within 24 hours, or House Democrats will vote to impeach him again. Such is the blind hatred of Pelosi’s House for Donald Trump.
Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina suggested holding off sending a bill of impeachment to the Senate for 100 days to give Biden a chance to get his appointees confirmed, and then indict and convict Mr. Trump of sedition when he is a private citizen. What would be the purpose of impeaching a president who hasn’t been president for three months? Answer: A conviction would strip Republicans of the right to reelect the man who got the largest number of votes in their party’s history. House Democrats want veto power over whom Republicans can nominate. And this is the crowd that does not cease to bray about its devotion to “democracy.”
What are the specific grounds for impeaching Trump? In the first draft of the resolution of impeachment, apparently, the crime is “incitement to insurrection.” Yet, in his Jan. 6 speech on the mall, Trump declared, “We’re going to cheer on brave senators and congressmen and congresswomen, and we’re probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them.” Mr. Trump added, “Everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.”
Nowhere in the president’s remarks was there a call to violence or to invade the Capitol building, or to engage in the mob criminality that took place under the Capitol dome Wednesday afternoon. But the effort to disgrace and drive Trump from an office he was scheduled to vacate within about 10 days was only a part of the general purge that is underway against conservatives, Republicans, and Trumpists. Twitter and Facebook—the social media megaphones Mr. Trump has used to communicate with some 80 million followers—have terminated the president’s personal accounts. Apple, Amazon, and Google have cut ties to the social media website Parler, which is popular among conservatives.
The goal of Big Tech is censorship—to circumscribe Donald Trump’s capacity to communicate with his followers, and then to cripple the capacity of the right to communicate with one another. And this is being applauded by individuals who see themselves as acolytes of the First Amendment.
Now calls are coming from home-state newspapers and colleagues for Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz to resign from the Senate. And for what? During Mike Pence’s reading of the count during a joint session on Jan. 6, Cruz and Hawley called for debate on the electoral vote counts of Arizona and Pennsylvania. What Hawley and Cruz did was not only permissible under the statute, it was also supported by more than 100 Republican members of the House of Representatives.
Now, Cumulus Media, which has more than 400 radio stations and employs some of the most popular conservative talk-radio hosts in the nation, has warned its on-air personalities to stop suggesting the election of 2020 was stolen from Trump—or face termination. Said Brian Philips, vice president of content at Cumulus, in an internal memo: We “will not tolerate any suggestion that the election has not ended. The election has been resolved and there are no alternate acceptable ‘paths.’ If you transgress this policy,” says Philips, “you can expect to separate from the company immediately.” Major corporations have begun to instruct their political action committees to halt contributions to Republican legislators who support Trump. And some of Trump’s Cabinet officers and White House staff have bailed out on him.
“Count your friends when you’re down,” Richard Nixon said.
On Jan. 21, Democrats took control of the Senate, the House, and the White House. Big Tech, Big Business, Big Media will all be on board. They will be led, however, by a president and vice president who are in their offices not because of the great campaign they conducted and the brilliant case they made, but because Americans voted in the most massive turnout in history, 74 million for Trump and 81 million against Trump.
As for the GOP, it should follow in these difficult days the counsel of Lyndon Baines Johnson when things were going bad: “Just hunker down like a mule in a hailstorm. And let the wild wind blow. And the Sun will come out again in the morning.”
In two years, the pendulum will swing back to the right, for it now has nowhere else to go.
Pat Buchanan is a writer, political commentator and presidential candidate. He is the author of Nixon’s White House Wars: The Battles That Made and Broke a President and Divided America Forever and previous titles including The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to Create the New Majority, Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? and Churchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War, all available from the AFP Online Store.s cvx
Right. We’re just supposed to look the other way in the face of massive voter fraud. Well ain’t that some not so sage advice.