Debating Impeachment Among Democrats
By David Swanson
Can you even imagine Republicans, even if they were in a minority in Congress, debating whether or not to call for the
impeachment of a Democratic president known and documented as guilty of a wide range of high crimes and misdemeanors? In
particular, if you can imagine that, can you imagine the Republicans who opposed impeachment arguing that they were
doing so for strategic political reasons?
This is hard to imagine, because the Republicans won a majority in Congress by loudly proclaiming what they would do if
they had it. The main thing they said they would do and still say they will do is oppose the agenda of the Democrats.
Meanwhile, Democratic voters and lapsed voters keep waiting for the Democrats to have an agenda. Polls show that most of
us want strong positions on single-payer health care, clean elections, ending the war, shifting to renewable energy,
investing in education, restoring the minimum wage, restoring New Orleans, and other policies that incumbent Democrats
are usually - at best - taking baby steps on.
The Democrats in Congress seem to be operating under the delusion that they might achieve something small by trying to
cooperate with the radical right-wingers who rule the committees. The RNC depicts Nancy Pelosi as Darth Vader, but she
wants to work cooperatively with them. At some point this behavior develops into self-hatred.
One of the positions that we Democratic voters seem to care most strongly and decisively about is impeachment of the
president. In a recent Zogby poll in Pennsylvania, 85 percent of Democrats favored congressional candidates who are
committed to impeachment. Over 75 percent STRONGLY preferred such candidates. These and other polls are revealing not
just a preference, but a passionate preference.
Democrats who think they can run on content-free platforms and win because of disgust for Bush are apparently aware of
the disgust that's out there. What they are missing is that it's even higher for Democrats who fail to stand up to Bush.
I've been at a number of events around the country - Democratic events and anti-war events - where the applause and
cheering for impeachment has been matched only by the booing and hissing for Democrats who roll over and refuse to
challenge the Bush regime.
Some commentators say we can't push impeachment until after non-Republicans win a majority in Congress.
This makes no sense to me, because first we need a reason to vote the Democrats a majority. You don't get a majority
without offering people a reason to vote you one.
If 85 percent of Democrats want candidates who stand for impeachment, impeachment could help win a majority. These two
goals are not opposed, but impeachment may need to come first if winning Congress is to be achieved.
Winning Congress for the Democrats may or may not be needed in order to impeach Bush and Cheney. It also may or may not
lead to impeachment. This will depend on what sort of Democrats we elect, how we pressure them once they're in, and
whether we've built a massive campaign for impeachment that is already up and running once they get there.
It's hard enough getting Democrats to do what they promise to do during their campaigns. Imagine how hard it would be to
get them to do something controversial if we'd all kept quiet about it during the campaigns!
There is always an election around the corner. If that's a reason not to fight for justice, then we can never fight for
justice.
It is not a waste of time to push popular positions without any guarantee or even likelihood they'll succeed. It is the
only way to make them eventually succeed. And it is the only way to change the political balance.
It is also the only thing Democrats in Congress are doing right now. Why should the Dems push futile proposals on
education, energy, the war, and every other issue, but not push a futile proposal on impeachment? If we're going to
declare everything futile, then they should just go home until someone miraculously gives them a majority.
OR, they could fight for what people want them to fight for, and provide us a reason to vote them a majority.
We need to demand right now that they sign on (as 23 of them have) to H Res 635, John Conyers' bill to create an
investigation that will make recommendations on impeachment.
And let's be clear: We need to impeach both Bush and Cheney. It seems likely in fact that we'll persuade a member of
Congress to introduce articles of impeachment against Cheney before Bush.
But there are several reasons we should not worry about the remote possibility that impeaching Bush would stick us with
Cheney as President.
First of all, an investigation into possible grounds for impeachment, as well as proposals for censure, serves an
educational and political purpose, whether or not we get to impeachment. We further discredit the Bushies, and we help
to build an opposition.
Impeachment and removal from office are two separate things, one of which has never been done in U.S. history. We should
try for removal from office, but we shouldn't worry about it one way or another while fighting for impeachment.
It would be virtually impossible to investigate Bush or Cheney without incriminating the other one. If we impeach one,
we impeach both.
Cheney is running the show now backstage. If by some combination of incredibly improbably occurrences he ended up
president, we'd be better off with him up front as a walking advertisement for voting against Republicans. We'd be no
worse off, since he's already in charge.
It is, in any case, our duty to demand impeachment. If you cannot impeach for the highest crime imaginable, taking the
nation to war on the basis of lies, then you can never impeach, or impeachment must be reserved for sex. We must not be
the ones to effectively remove the impeachment process from the US Constitution.
It is the duty of every citizen to demand what is right and just, come what may. More important than who sits in the
Oval Office is that they know that we can hold them accountable for their actions.
Allowing criminal underlings to provide immunity is a recipe for disaster. If Bush is untouchable because Cheney is
criminal, let's stop and think where that leaves us.
And let's stop and think about what it means to be a citizen. We all know that it's unlikely that a Republican Congress
will impeach Bush and Cheney. But most of us understand that no important change has ever looked likely - through the
course of history - before it's been won. And most of us know that our respect for Democrats will increase dramatically
if they fight for what is right, likely or not, plausible or not, reasonable or not. Pundits will call them foolish.
People will call them heroes.
Americans are fed up with Bush but even more turned off by Democrats' failure to develop backbones.
Can you imagine every Democrat in Congress standing strongly for impeachment? Can you imagine the pressure that would
put on Republicans to join them? I bet you can.
We only need 15 Republicans. Are you going to tell me that nonviolent people's movements can create democracy in Russia,
can kick the British out of India, can resist the Nazi occupation in Denmark, can drive a dictator out of El Salvador
and another out of the Philippines, can end Jim Crow, can bring down the Soviet Union, can topple military regimes in
Argentina and Chile, can end Apartheid, and can bring democracy to the Ukraine, but can't win the votes of 15
Republicans.
How narrow are our dreams! How shrunken is our vision!
Let's think larger! Let's say with Marvin Gaye this Valentine's Day: "Stop beating around the Bush. Let's get it on!"
ENDS