Caroline Brehman/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
I've
had the displeasure to watch some hours of the House Intelligence Committee’s
impeachment inquiry. It’s an excruciating spectacle, alternately boring, confusing,
and infuriating.
Where
have the Democrats set the high-crime-and-misdemeanor goalpost today? Is it the
“Russian collusion” for which Adam Schiff had “direct evidence” even before the Mueller
investigation? How about the “10 different episodes of presidential obstruction
of justice” for which Jamie Raskin told us “the evidence is overwhelming”? No,
really, they got him on “quid pro quo”! Or is it “abuse of power”? Wait, it’s “bribery.” Final answer.
(They focussed-grouped it!) Bombshells all.
I
have no interest in parsing the minutiae of the purported case Schiff is now
making against Trump. (I’ll leave that to Aaron Maté, who does it so well.) I’ve said before that I think it’s political folly.
Here, I would like those who are enthralled by the ongoing impeachment frenzy
to focus for a moment on one glaring contradiction in the logic of the
Democrats’ position—a contradiction that reveals that the Democrats are
speaking with forked tongue about what they are actually trying to do.
To wit:
Prime
Directive A: The Absolute Most Important Thing Ever In The History Of The
Universe (or at least The American Republic) Is To Defeat Trump in 2020.
We’ve
heard this incessantly from Democrats since election day 2016. For
establishment Democrats, this injunction governs all political discourse and behavior
in the party. It has been the bedrock mandate for Democrats going into election
2020, the basis of a hoped-for party discipline in the primary debates. It
requires that any “left” candidate (only Bernie and Tulsi could be so
characterized, and only Bernie is a real electoral threat) must temper his or
her promotion of system-changing social policies like Medicare-for-All or an
end to regime-change wars, and refrain from sharply calling out reactionary
"nothing will fundamentally change" opponents. The most
consequential questions and debates about social policies that affect all
Americans must be subordinated to the imperative to win the 2020 presidential
election. Don't be divisive. Don't criticize “centrist”—i.e., reactionary and
imperialist—Democrats. Vote Blue No Matter Who.
In
May, Nancy Pelosi herself defined Democratic strategy—and, it’s
important to note, her refusal at the time to pursue impeachment—in terms of
this injunction, as “focused on pursuing center-left policies she thinks will
help her party out in 2020 — a focus on pragmatic improvements … that
emphasizes beating Mr. Trump.” And she and her colleagues have continued to
enforce that injunction on the Party since.
Now,
there’s Prime Directive B: We Must Impeach Trump, even if doing so helps
to re-elect him!
It’s
that stark of a contradiction. Aware that “more voters believe [impeachment] will strengthen
Trump's re-election chances than hurt them and … will [even] hurt Democrats'
chances at retaining a majority in the House,” Pelosi’s response is: "It doesn’t matter. Our first
responsibility is to protect and defend the Constitution of the United
States." It’s a huge “political risk,” but "That doesn't matter.
That doesn't matter. Because we cannot have a president of the United States …
undermining our national security, and undermining the integrity of our
elections."
It
“doesn’t matter”—three times.
New
Party discipline, not just from Pelosi, Schiff, and establishment but from
progressive Dems, too: Must vote to impeach Trump, “political risk” be
damned! It’s our constitutional duty.
It’s
inspiring to hear that Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff have risen above politics
to constitutional duty, but there’s still an absolute contradiction in these
positions that has to be recognized. There cannot be two “most important”
things. Either the most important thing is to defeat Trump or it’s to impeach
him.
If
you try to wriggle out of that by saying: “The best way to defeat Trump is to
impeach him,” don’t, because you have to recognize that Pelosi is emphatically not
saying that. Pelosi recognizes that an impeachment process is virtually certain
to fall short of removing Trump from office, and may very well help him retain
the Presidency and the Republicans regain control of the Congress. She,
Schiff, and the Democrats are saying “We are not impeaching Trump
because we think it’s the best way to defeat him. We know it’s not, and indeed that
it carries a great risk of strengthening his rule. We are doing it because it’s
our constitutional duty as patriotic Americans.”
You
can believe in the sincerity, rather than the moralizing hypocrisy, of that proclamation—and
I’m sure there are some Democratic congresspersons who at least believe it when
they say it. But you cannot ignore the evident contradiction between the
conflicting Prime Directives, or the strange fact that Democrats are
ignoring it, simply pretending it’s not there. (It’s what Althusserian theory
would see as a classic ideological construct: a contradiction that’s produced
[even obvious] but not recognized.) Once you do recognize this
contradiction, as a sentient creature in the American political universe you’d have
to be extremely naïve not to suspect that something else besides
“constitutional duty” explains what is going on here.
After
all, wasn’t the point of the Democrats’ first Prime Directive precisely that
re-electing Trump would itself fatally harm the Constitution and the Republic? Does
not pursuing “politically risky” impeachment instead of concentrating on
winning the election effect that very harm?
It
might clarify what else is going on to notice that the Democratic leadership
wants us to accept that Prime Directive B requires us to have a divisive debate
about a whole bunch of things; while Prime Directive A still forbids us from having
a divisive debate about social policy.
Democrats
say we now must take the “political risk” of Trump being re-elected and the
Republicans controlling the legislature, via a prolonged and divisive
debate over such things as Adam Schiff’s interpretation of the oath of office,
the emoluments and bribery clauses, the need to arm Kiev without any
delay, the need to recognize and confront “Russian aggression” in Ukraine and
Georgia and to expand NATO, the dismissal of Ukrainian interference in the 2016
election, the parsing of overheard telephone calls, and the meaning of the word
“though.” All that matters.
But
we still cannot and must not tolerate a sharp debate about whether Americans
should have healthcare, education, jobs, housing, and forgo regime-change war. That
doesn't matter.
One
set of things matters, and merits risking division and electoral failure. One
doesn't.
Seeing
what actually matters to the Democratic Party and what doesn’t discloses the
governing principle and the actual logic underlying the seemingly contradictory
Directives. Though he is presented as the main focus in both cases, what
matters is not Donald Trump. He is the most garish puppet in their Punch
and Judy show, but it is not about him. What matters is maintaining neo-liberal
capitalist (“centrist”) domestic socio-economic policies and neocon,
imperialist foreign and military policies. Both Prime Directives are based on
that.
The
real point of Prime Directive A is, exactly as Nancy Pelosi said, to “focus”
the Party “on pursuing center-left policies”—i.e., to channel all discussion,
and our undivided attention, away from insurgent social democratic and antiwar demands.
For that purpose, the nomination of a candidate like Bernie Sanders or Tulsi
Gabbard is the fundamental threat, and the frightening specter of a re-elected
Donald Trump is held out to prevent it.
In
light of that main objective, the real point of Prime Directive B is not
contradictory, but complementary, to Directive A: To use attacking Trump as a means
to ensure that the US continue “pursuing center-left policies.” In the realm of
foreign policy that means reactionary “Washington consensus” exceptionalism and
interventionism, and an insistence on the dangerous anti-Russia campaign that Democrats
and Republicans have been pursuing at least since Bill Clinton decided to bring
virtually every post-Soviet state into NATO. For that purpose, the scary, absolutely
delusional, specter of “all roads lead to Putin” Trump that the Democrats have spent
three years concocting via Russiagate and its extension, Ukrainegate, is held
out again as the villain that has to be stopped—this time by an “undivided”
coterie of Congressional constitutionalists.
Trump
in this is a foil for reinforcing the imperialist paradigm. Behind all the
blather about “constitutional duty” addressed to its gullible constituency, the
Democratic leadership, which knows very well the enormous political risk that impeachment
hearings will help Trump, is building a case for its other real audience—Republican
senators. It is publicly—and I guarantee, privately—pounding on the theme of
Trump as not a reliable steward of US imperialism.
The
Ukrainian arms shipment may be the only thing in the public forum, but the full
message in the cloakrooms is that Trump is the guy who wanted better relations
with Russia, who said he might accept Crimea’s accession to Russia, who called
off a military strike on Iran, who tried to withdraw troops from Syria, etc.
All these things defy the neocon “interagency consensus” that the Democrats,
their witnesses, and the Republicans hold so dear, and they are being spun
into a case that Trump must go, because, as Pelosi said, he is “undermining our
national security.” This is the only pitch the Democrats want to make
and are making, and that has a slight chance of succeeding with enough
Republican senators. As I’ve indicated before, the timing suggests that Pelosi
and/or Schiff may have indications, from interactions we are not seeing (Watch
out for Bolton!), that it might work.
A
very slight chance. From everything we have seen so far, this is moving toward
a political disaster for the Democrats—if defeating Donald Trump were the measure
of that.
Except,
at the end of the day, the Democrats do not care if they fail spectacularly, since
their main objective is not to impeach or convict or beat Trump electorally, but
to protect the Washington consensus—to undermine the rising social-democratic
demands in the party and keep the US on its interagency-assigned imperialist
and Zionist trajectory.
That is the thing “above politics” to
which they proclaim their ultimate fealty, misspelling it “constitutional
duty.”
Sure,
they would like to replace Trump, who’s too crass and unreliable, but only
with someone who will be more reliable for those purposes. Otherwise,
they are quite willing to stomach another four years of an ignorant, weak, and vacillating
Trump, whom the neocons have been pretty successful at pushing where they need
him to go.
As
Canadian columnist Rick Salutin asks, and answers: “Does this mean party bosses would rather
lose control of the country and presidency than cede power in their party?
Absolutely.”
It
takes only a minute of thinking past CNN/MSNBC’s blaring insistence that
everything is going swimmingly for impeachment, which will be inevitable after
the next blockbuster witness, to see how utterly stupid this is. Once this gets
into the Senate, it is going to be child’s play for the Republicans—who will
now control the witnesses and evidence—not only to go into the weeds of Biden-Burisma
and Clinton Foundation corruption, but, as the Washington Post (WaPo)
reports they are considering, to “scramble
the Democratic presidential race” with a “lengthy impeachment trial” that would
“[keep] six contenders in Washington until the eve of the Iowa caucuses or
longer.” Much longer. Why not? Gotta be scrupulous in doing that
“constitutional duty.”
Of
course, two of those captured-in-Washington contenders would be, per WaPo,
“the leading progressive candidates, Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth
Warren.” As Republican John Cornyn says: “Pete Buttigieg and Joe Biden might
like that.” The Democratic “party bosses” know it too, so they may not be
unamenable to this Republican strategy.
As
I feared, and as anyone could have foreseen,
the Democrats’ impeachment theater is only making American politics worse. It
has reinforced the worst elements of neocon militarism while wrapping itself in
hypocritical moralizing about “constitutional duty.” There is nothing
progressive that will come of it. In fact, the biggest fools in all this have
been and are the “progressive” and #Resistance Democratic politicians and
voters who pushed for impeachment, and went along as the process was inevitably
taken over by “badass” CIA veterans and warmongering
Russophobes.
It
is likely to help Donald Trump get re-elected, and is certain to “scramble” the
Democratic primaries as well as the general election campaign. Can anyone be
dense enough to think that giving Trump the stage for the next year, and
locking away in Washington two of his strongest (including the one left
populist) potential opponents, is the smart strategy to beat him? We can
measure how helpful that will be by counting how many speeches Democratic
candidates have been giving about impeachment when they are campaigning outside
the Beltway bubble.
If
progressive politicians had any political sense, they would urge Pelosi not
to pass articles of impeachment, go home for the holidays, and get on with the
business of trying to elect a president that isn’t going to kill us all.
But
they won’t, because, as Salutin says (in one of the best single sentences about
the Trump era): “Their monomania over Trump exactly parallels his egomania
about himself. Neither can get enough.”
This
is Trump Derangement Syndrome, deliberately cultivated to distract. It’s that
thing where, instead of ameliorating your friend’s craziness, you catch it.
So
the logic of the two contradictory Prime Directives plays out: Defeat Trump or
impeach him? Neither.
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Related articles: Impeachment: What Lies Beneath?, Dead Man’s Hand: The Impeachment Gambit; The Empire Steps Back: Trump Withdraws From Syria – Impeachment Now Possible; Investigation Nation: Mueller, Russiagate, and Fake Politics; Be Careful What You Ask For: Wasting Time with Manafort, Cohen, and Russiagate
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Related articles: Impeachment: What Lies Beneath?, Dead Man’s Hand: The Impeachment Gambit; The Empire Steps Back: Trump Withdraws From Syria – Impeachment Now Possible; Investigation Nation: Mueller, Russiagate, and Fake Politics; Be Careful What You Ask For: Wasting Time with Manafort, Cohen, and Russiagate
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