Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 6 November 2017
'Waiting is a mistake': the billionaire pushing lawmakers to impeach Trump
Tom Steyer, a prominent Democratic patron, is running an outspoken ad campaign that’s got the president riled up
Tom Steyer speaking at San Francisco City Hall last month. He calls Donald Trump a ‘clear and present danger’.
Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Democrats
have long trod carefully around the “I” word. But as the one-year
anniversary of Donald Trump’s election victory approaches, a prominent
donor is pressuring lawmakers and candidates on the left to make
impeachment a central message of their campaigns in 2018.
In October, Tom Steyer, a billionaire hedge fund manager turned
environmental activist, launched a “eight-figure” ad campaign demanding
that elected officials and candidates in his party “take a stand” on
removing Trump from office.
“The fact of the matter is that we believe he is dangerous to the
American people now,” Steyer told the Guardian. “We believe that waiting
is a mistake and we believe the events that will occur over the next
year will show that we are right.”
Steyer – who said he is “not ruling out” running for office himself
in 2018 – has a list of reasons why he believes Trump should be
impeached, which he has also outlined in a letter to congressional
lawmakers.
He says Trump has put the country on a path toward nuclear war,
obstructed justice by firing the FBI director, James Comey, violated the
emoluments clause by taking money from foreign governments, and
threatened to close news organizations whose reporting he doesn’t like.
That list, he noted, was created before the news last week
that special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged
collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian had yielded two
indictments and a guilty plea.
“This campaign is a reflection of the fact that we are in a crisis
and that is not how it’s represented in the press and that is not how
it’s reflected in Washington,” Steyer said. He added that the
indictments of Trump’s former campaign manager Paul Manafort and another
aide, Rick Gates, and guilty plea by a former adviser, George
Papadopoulos, “clearly put impeachment on the table”.
Steyer’s campaign has drawn rebuke from the president. After the ad
played during a segment on Fox & Friends, a show Trump regularly
watches, the president lashed out.
“Wacky & totally unhinged Tom Steyer, who has been fighting me
and my Make America Great Again agenda from beginning, never wins
elections!” Trump said.
Steyer said he wasn’t involved in the decision to place the ad during
Fox & Friends but he welcomed the attention it brought to the
campaign.
“I think the fact that he responded so defensively actually drew more
attention to what we were trying to do,” Steyer said. “And to that I
say, ‘Thank you.’ If he wants to tweet angrily at us, we would encourage
him to do that as much as I can.”
Advertisement
The TV and digital ads will run in all 50 states, the campaign said. And many liberals outside California, where Steyer lives, his digital and TV ads will be their first introduction to the Democratic patron.
Starring in ads, Steyer calls Trump a “clear and present danger” and
calmly lays out what he views is a case for impeachment. A petition
accompanying the campaign has already gathered more than 1.5 million
signatures, he said.
“A Republican Congress once impeached a president for far less,”
Steyer says in the ad, referring to Bill Clinton. “Yet today people in
Congress and his own administration know that this president is a clear
and present danger who’s mentally unstable and armed with nuclear
weapons and they do nothing.”
Impeachment must begin in the House of Representatives. Steyer argues that voters deserve to know whether congressional Democrats will act if they retake the chamber next year.
Only a handful of lawmakers are openly in favor of impeachment. So
far, Democratic leaders have urged colleagues to wait for investigators
to conclude their work.
The House minority leader, Nancy Pelosi, Steyer’s representative in Congress, has mused that Trump could “self-impeach” but has reportedly
discouraged any discussions on the topic from within her own caucus.
Instead she is urging Democrats to focus their energy on derailing
Republicans’ tax reform. On Sunday, she told CNN’s State of the Union
impeachment was “not some place I think we should go”.
Attendees at a rally addressed by Tom Steyer hold signs
calling for the impeachment of Donald Trump. Photograph: Justin
Sullivan/Getty Images
But in a sign calls for impeachment are gaining traction in
Washington, Luis Gutiérrez, a Democrat of Illinois, said last week that a
group of Democrats would file articles of impeachment before
Thanksgiving.
“I think it is time that we begin to have that conversation,” Gutiérrez said
during a breakfast at the City Club of Chicago, adding that Trump was
an “ill-fit” for the office. Gutiérrez also stressed that the group was
working independently and was not supported by Pelosi or the Democratic
party.
That group would join Democrats Al Green and Brad Sherman, who have
introduced articles of impeachment though neither appear to be moving
forward. Green recently said he would attempt to force a vote on
impeaching Trump, but the effort was quickly abandoned.
Polling suggests public support for impeachment is growing. A recent survey by the Public Policy Poll
found a “record level of support for impeaching Trump”, with 49% of
respondents saying they were in favor and 41% saying they were not.
Steyer has said
he is considering running for the US senate, challenging Dianne
Feinstein, a Democrat, who is seeking a fifth term. Feinstein has
refused to back calls for impeachment, urging “patience” and expressing
hope that Trump might yet be a “good president”.
In his letter, Steyer writes: “It is evident that there is zero reason to believe ‘he can be a good president.’”
Impeachment is more popular among Democrats than Republicans
– making it a particularly good proposal to follow should Steyer run in
California, a blue state that has relished its role resisting Trump.
No comments:
Post a Comment