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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 19 November 2019
Marie Yovanovitch represents something Americans are desperate for: decency
Trump calls her ‘bad news’, but the public won’t be convinced by his smear
‘Trump could not resist bursting out his tweet trying to defame her.
Photograph: Ron Sachs/CNP/Rex/Shutterstock
Donald Trump finally jumped the shark on Twitter last week when he smeared the former ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch while she was testifying to the House intelligence committee.
Immediately the words of Joseph Welch, a native of Primghar, Iowa, and general counsel to the army in 1954, sprang to mind:
“Have you no sense of decency, sir?”
They were written on her stunned face and echoed in the standing
ovation Yovanovitch received as she was escorted from the Capitol
hearing room on Friday.
This woman of understatement and restraint has become a symbol of
something America yearns for down to its very core, as it did in the
McCarthy era ended by Welch’s seven words of exasperated pleading.
Decency.
Marie Yovanovitch was cloaked in it.
You could hear it in the timbre of her quiet voice and see it in her
downward gaze as congressmen, even Trump’s most ardent backers, praised
her patriotism and selflessness for 33 years of diplomatic service –
including five hardship postings in places like Somalia.
Trump calls her “bad news” to world leaders. He told the president of Ukraine that she would be going through some things.
She felt threatened. She was told by a friend to watch her back in
Kyiv. What does that mean? Get home on the first flight, she was told at
1am. What was going on? She took the call not long after her
corruption-fighting Ukrainian patriot friend had been murdered by acid.
We imagined her fear.
Why did Trump and Giuliani smear her? To what lengths will they go? And what will stop their recklessness and lawlessness?
Marie Yovanovitch calls Trump's disparaging tweet 'intimidating' – video
Yovanovitch and others of courage stood erect, raised their right
hands to tell the truth, and defied Trump’s orders not to testify.
The
deputy assistant secretary of state George Kent and William Taylor, the
acting Ukrainian ambassador, provided a sober recitation of the facts
on the first day of the impeachment hearings: President Trump demanded
that Ukraine investigate Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, on trumped-up
corruption charges already proven baseless. We knew that before the
impeachment hearings. Public opinion was not going to change by
repeating the facts out loud. What, or who, could move the Senate
Republican caucus still standing firm with a corrupt but feared
president?
The daughter of refugees from the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, that’s who. An immigrant, no less, who earned her citizenship.
America knew from the moment she spoke that she represented honesty
and true loyalty to the constitution, that safe harbor we always seek in
a storm. Yovanovitch is our lodestar, just like Joe Welch, himself the
son of immigrants.
She said her service was an expression of her gratitude for what this
country gave her family, and what she sought to spread to Ukraine
through diplomacy: freedom.
That’s the powerful stuff that we were taught in school to believe.
Who could rebut her? Not Representative Jim Jordan in shirtsleeves,
certainly.
Trump could not resist bursting out his tweet trying to defame her. That’s where the reality TV circus stopped.
Yovanovitch told Congress she felt threatened and intimidated. Devastated.
She looked down at the table and moved the paper cup from her right
side to her left, took a brief sip through pursed lips, and then looked
up and sideways wishing to avoid the attention. Most right-thinking
Americans – truth be told, secretly, some Republican senators – wanted
to embrace her right then.
Or name her ambassador to the United Nations. Or secretary of state,
if she would take it for the needless scars already suffered.
House Republicans could not defend Trump in the face of this
61-year-old woman whose song was her work in the cause of freedom by
means of rooting out corruption.
She rooted out Trump in the middle of the hearing as he blurted more
bile. It changed the course of the impeachment hearings. It will change
the course of politics, just as Joe Welch
did. We were reminded of the redeeming power of decency, which properly
resides in a healthy sense of shame that is very much alive right now.
It will take down Trump and revive the Republic.
Art Cullen is editor of the Storm Lake Times in Iowa and won the
2017 Pulitzer prize for editorial writing. Cullen is the author of Storm
Lake: A Chronicle of Change, Resilience, and Hope from a Heartland
Newspaper
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