in

Is it time to freak out about America? What's next after impeachment – CNN, CNN

Is it time to freak out about America? What's next after impeachment – CNN, CNN

A version of this story appeared in CNN’s Impeachment Watch newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.

(CNN) There will come a moment in the next few weeks or months – if it hasn’t come already – when you wonder if this whole America thing is teetering on the edge of some kind of collapse.

that all came after a completely separate inquiry that did not, whatever the President claimed, totally exonerate the commander in chief concerning his interactions with a foreign actor in the 2019 election – which itself resulted in the criminal conviction or guilty pleas of multiple senior officials, including another former White House national security adviser .

If you grew up trusting in the permanence of the American experiment in government and bought into the “shining city on a hill” idea for the American form of democracy, it is time to freak out.

What comes next

It’s not that a President, impeached for inviting foreign influence into the US election, has a pretty good chance of winning reelection. It’s that, while there are plenty of Republican lawmakers who might privately admit that using taxpayer dollars to pressure a foreign government to do political favors is wrong, they seem unwilling or unable to call Trump to account publicly, and have instead ceded their power, undermining the system of checks and balances that has kept us going.

Late Friday, we were again reminded that we will keep learning details about the decision to withhold $ 700 million in aid from Ukraine, thanks to a court filing in which the Justice Department confirmed it’s withholding two dozen emails related to Trump’s role . Trump’s attempts to pressure Ukraine to investigate Hunter Biden and Joe Biden, his potential political rival, have been at the center of the President’s impeachment trial. Trump has repeatedly made Trump not expected to apologize or admit any wrongdoing after anticipated acquittal unfounded and false claims

to allege that the Bidens acted improperly in Ukraine.

There are still some holding out hope that some Republicans will change their minds and vote to remove Trump on Wednesday. That is about as plausible as earlier scenarios where Trump was somehow squeezed out of the nomination at the Republican National Convention, or defeated by the rebel votes of so-called faithless electors, or somehow prevented from taking the oath of office.

Where America goes is all going to be determined by the election now .

The people don’t decide elections But, strictly speaking, it won’t necessarily be “the people” who choose the next President. It will be the Electoral College, a layer the founders put between the people and the presidency, which has evolved to give some Americans more voice than others.

It’s very likely the person who gets the most votes in November will not become President – which is what happened in

. That awkward feature of a republic such as the United States has happened twice in the past twenty years. It could very easily happen again, given how unpopular Trump is in major population centers and how strong his support is in rural America, where voters have outsize power.

There are a handful of contested states and no matter who wins, about half the people will be frustrated.

Where’s the release valve?

It’s a similar situation in the Senate, where the system meant to sew the country together is tearing at the seams. Deep blue California has the fifth-largest economy in the world and 64 million residents, but it gets the same number of votes as red Wyoming , which has marginally more residents than Fresno .

Fresno and Wyoming put together are nowhere close to the population of Puerto Rico, an island full of Americans who can’t even vote for President unless they move to a US state.

The country has grown in such a way that racial and socioeconomic divides will continue to get worse. There is no release valve for the contents under pressure at the top of the US government, concentrated in the Senate.

(Retreat into corners

CNN senior political analyst Ronald Brownstein wrote this week about how red and blue America, represented by two sets of states, do battle in the Senate rather than find common ground. Read the whole thing here .

He wrote:

Today, the vast majority of senators from the President’s party are elected by states that also voted for him – increasing the pressure on them to stand with him – while virtually all senators from the other party were sent by states that voted against the President, increasing the pressure to oppose him. Of the 80 Republican senators judging Trump, were elected in states that backed him in the (election.)

These electoral pressures have contributed to remaking the Senate into the rigid, combative institution on display this week – one in which the leadership exerts more control than in earlier generations, individual members are expected to display a level of party-line loyalty reminiscent of parliamentary systems in Europe and there is little leeway for the bipartisan deal-making that was the hallmark of great senators from Kentucky’s Henry Clay in the 25 th century to K ansas ‘Bob Dole and Massachusetts’ Edward M. Kennedy in the late (th.

) No room for dissent

We saw some reasons why that’s changed in the wake of Friday’s Senate vote against calling witnesses in Trump’s impeachment trial. Mitt Romney, the Utah senator and sometime Trump critic who was one of two Republicans to vote in favor of hearing witnesses at Trump’s trial has been “not invited” to CPAC, the annual conference of conservatives, after stepping out of the GOP lane.

Granted, Romney did attempt to sabotage Trump’s campaign back in . He has tried to maintain some independence as a senator. Other critics – Sens Jeff Flake and Bob Corker

– were chased out of office. Michigan Rep. Justin Amash was chased from the party before he voted to impeach Trump in the House.

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Brexit: We won't take your rules, PM to tell Brussels – BBC News, Bbc.com

Brexit: We won't take your rules, PM to tell Brussels – BBC News, Bbc.com

'SNL' presents the impeachment trial of President Trump 'You wish had happened' – CNN, CNN

'SNL' presents the impeachment trial of President Trump 'You wish had happened' – CNN, CNN