GOP splinters on Trump impeachment as House set to rebuke president yet again with just days left in term

As the House of Representatives is on the verge of impeaching President Trump for the second time, Republicans in both chambers of Congress are split on whether or not to support the effort in the tumultuous final days of the Trump presidency. 

Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: Treason and Sedition Party will be on the record today

NBC:

This chaotic moment has one root cause: Trump's refusal to accept his loss

First Read is your briefing from "Meet the Press" and the NBC Political Unit on the day's most important political stories and why they matter.

The president begging Georgia’s secretary of state to overturn the election results … More than 140 House and Senate Republicans objecting to the Electoral College count … Trump addressing supporters in Washington (“You will have an illegitimate president … And we can't let that happen.”) … Many of those supporters later storming the Capitol … Trump saying that he won’t attend the inauguration (and getting banned from Twitter) … The drafting of articles of impeachment … And now authorities warning of more armed protests.

All of these events have taken place in just the last 10 days.

And of all them have a simple root cause — the president of the United States refusing to concede an election he clearly lost. (Yes, he acknowledged there would be a new administration and a transition of power, but that’s as far as he’s gone.)

We still need to work on whether there were higher-ups involved with Wednesday’s abysmal law enforcement response.

Good luck to house republicans struggling to figure out how to vote on impeachment tomorrow cause trump didn’t give you anything to work with here https://t.co/ahu6SWj4eq

— jim manley (@jamespmanley) January 12, 2021

Amy Davidson Sorkin/New Yorker:

A Second Trump Impeachment Could Answer More Questions About the Attack on the Capitol

Kevin McCarthy, the House Minority Leader, who voted to reject the Electoral College votes of Arizona and Pennsylvania, is among those Republicans now complaining that impeachment is divisive. (In a private, closed-door meeting of the House Republican caucus, McCarthy reportedly acknowledged that Trump has some responsibility for what happened on January 6th—a pathetic half-gesture that only raises the question of why McCarthy seems afraid to hold the President to account in public, and whether he is ready to renounce his own votes to overturn the Electoral College.) As Jamelle Bouie observed, in the Times, this sentiment is better understood as a threat to the country than as a desire for unity. The process will be as divisive or as unifying as the Republicans allow it to be. Seen from another angle, Pelosi is offering her Republican colleagues a chance to come together in a bipartisan way to make the point that the President should not instruct a crowd to march down Pennsylvania Avenue and “fight like hell”—a phrase quoted in the article of impeachment—against the certification of the legitimate winner of the election. Only a handful of House Republicans, notably Adam Kinzinger, of Illinois; Peter Meijer, of Michigan; and Liz Cheney, of Wyoming, seem likely to seize the opportunity—last week, after all, a majority of Republican House members voted to effectively disenfranchise the voters of Arizona and Pennsylvania. (Over the weekend, Meijer wrote of speaking to a colleague who said that he was objecting to the Electoral College tally only because he feared for the safety of his family.) But these are unpredictable days.

One way or another, it seems improbable that any trial in the Senate would begin before Trump leaves office. Even so, it would hardly be moot. In addition to removal from office, an available penalty after conviction is disqualification from holding federal office in the future; Trump could be barred from running in 2024. Again, a conviction would require a two-thirds majority of the Senate, which the Democrats don’t have. But the contours of the trial, and what might be revealed in the course of it, are not yet clear. There is much that we don’t know about what happened last week in Washington, and that we still need to know.

New: Group pledges up to $50 million to defend Republicans who support impeaching Trump https://t.co/Ypxg3JIFaY

— Annie Karni (@anniekarni) January 12, 2021

BuzzFeed:

There’s A Straight Line From Charlottesville To The Capitol

Wednesday’s attempted coup is just the natural extension of a presidency spent giving insurgents permission to come inside, kick their feet up, and tear down democracy.

That sense of open invitation was the mood for most of the day, even hours later, when the National Guard arrived in the evening to disperse what was left of the crowd. The rioters’ entrance into the Capitol building and Senate offices was casual, easy, with surprisingly little conflict for a group of people who were attempting a deadly coup in one of the largest democracies in the world. Even before Congress reconvened to finish the certification vote, there was plenty of hand-wringing about how this armed insurrection wasn’t reflective of the country. “This is wrong,” tweeted Rep. Nancy Mace, a Republican from South Carolina. “This is not who we are.” But, really, if something simultaneously shocking and woefully unsurprising happens — with a near-immediate justification and approval from the president — maybe it’s time to accept that this is exactly what America has always been.

Huffington Post reports at least 9 Republicans refused to wear masks while huddled in secure room during the riots.https://t.co/ossgD01tQM

— Steven Dennis (@StevenTDennis) January 12, 2021

Richard North Patterson/Bulwark:

The Political Context of the Assault on the Capitol

Bonfires of grievance and dispossession in a country riven by alternate realities.

Demographic sorting and racial and cultural antagonisms have enlisted Trump’s base in a zero-sum war of subjugation against antagonists most will never meet, but with whom they can never compromise. A society so polarized cannot deal with its most urgent problems—or even acknowledge what they are.

Amid the ravages of COVID this schism has turned deadly: The resistance to public health measures has become a form of suicide which doubles as a lethal attack on others. More broadly, the political stasis bred of division is killing our capacity to master our collective future. Inevitably, such a system will disintegrate—or explode.

The paralysis reflects a deeper social pathology with multiple tributaries—the toxins of racial and cultural estrangement; the disintegration of communal bonds; the proliferation of mind-numbing misinformation; the accelerating gaps in wealth and opportunity; the increasingly ossified class system—which, in turn, erode faith in democracy as a means of resolving our problems. Running through this is the crabbed doctrine of shareholder capitalism which reduces human beings to disposable units of production divorced from the conditions that give life dignity: health, safety, security, opportunity.

US Chamber of Commerce says some lawmakers will lose its support due to their actions last week (certification) and in the week ahead (impeachment). Candidates that show respect for Democratic institutions and norms will have its backing.

— Alan Rappeport (@arappeport) January 12, 2021

Nicholas Grossman/Arc Digital:

F*** You, Ted Cruz

You un-American, anti-democracy, lying sack of sh*t

“Liar or believer?” is often hard to answer. Trump-loving Congressmen Matt Gaetz and Jim Jordan, Fox personality Sean Hannity, MAGA “youth activist” Charlie Kirk, and President Trump himself seem to really believe some of it (though can’t possibly believe it all).

With Ted Cruz it’s easy. There’s no doubt that the Republican Senator from Texas is fully aware that Trumpist claims of mass voter fraud are complete and utter bunk. He’s a Harvard-educated attorney, clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist, and taught law at UT Austin. He knows that Team Trump lost 61 court cases in their effort to overturn state election results, winning only one (a Pennsylvania case with no effect on the outcome). He knows, contra Trump’s whining, that lack of standing is a perfectly legitimate reason for courts to reject a case. And he knows that the time for legal challenges is over now that states have recounted and audited their votes, and certified Electoral College results.

if anyone didn’t get it before, the violent end to the Trump era brought into sharper focus something about the previous era: namely, how much of the ferocious resistance President Obama faced wasn’t standard ideological or partisan conflict but rather white reactionary backlash

— John Harwood (@JohnJHarwood) January 11, 2021

Nicholas Grossman/Arc Digital:

QAnon Woke Up the Real Deep State

An open letter to QAnon, “stop the steal,” and other communities involved in the Capitol attack

To the QAnon community, and others involved in storming the Capitol:

The Deep State is real, but it’s not what you think. The Deep State you worry about is mostly made up; a fiction, a lie, a product of active imaginations, grifter manipulations, and the internet. I’m telling you this now because storming the Capitol building has drawn the attention of the real Deep State — the national security bureaucracy — and it’s important you understand what that means.

You attacked America. Maybe you think it was justified — as a response to a stolen election, or a cabal of child-trafficking pedophiles, or whatever — but it was still a violent attack on the United States. No matter how you describe it, that’s how the real Deep State is going to treat it.

The impact of that will make everything else feel like a LARP.

LARP is live action role-playing. After a few more repetitions, i won’t need to keep defining it.

"Don't be so divisive or we'll have to kill more cops." https://t.co/3mmEFyYOpG

— Charlie Sykes (@SykesCharlie) January 12, 2021

Emily Gorcenski/Twitter:

Here's the challenge with disrupting militia plots: most militia dudes are Dunning-Kruger levels of incompetent, but not Dunning-Kruger levels of dangerous. 
So the problem is that militia culture is wrapped up in this sort of virtue signalling nonstop. It's all around trying to project yourself as a leader, a military expert, a tactical master, based entirely on what you've read in Tom Clancy novels 
So a militia might say things like, alright, here's the plan. We're gonna get 1000 guys, and we're gonna set up a barricade at each of the three entrances to the statehouse, and then we're gonna neutralize the security forces. 
Super scary stuff! Just one problem. Where are they gonna get 1000 guys? How are they going to implement a Command and Control structure for 1000 guys? What are they gonna make the barricades out of? 

A Senate Republican aide tells me he thinks there were about 20, give or take, Republicans who were *open* to a conviction Before our story on McConnell

— Jonathan Martin (@jmartNYT) January 12, 2021

Kurt Bardella/USA Today:

Trump doesn't deserve post-presidential benefits. Remove him and ensure he won't get them.

In spite of the U.S. Capitol siege incited by President Donald Trump, Republican leaders in Congress continue to oppose any meaningful action to hold him accountable for his seditious conduct. They seem to think that in spite of his dangerous and undemocratic behavior, he should still be the beneficiary of taxpayer-financed perks for the rest of his life.

It has become clear that Republicans are trying to run out the clock on the Trump presidency, using his short-timer status to justify their inaction. “I firmly believe impeachment would further destroy our ability to heal and start over,” tweeted Sen. Lindsey Graham, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy maintained that impeaching Trump so close to the end of his term "will only divide our country more.”

For the record, I don’t remember Republicans in Congress worrying about healing the country when they created the Select Committee on Benghazi for the sole purpose of undermining Hillary Clinton, the Democrats' leading presidential prospect in the runup to the 2016 race. Does this mean that if there was more time in the Trump presidency,  they’d magically be for impeaching him? Last time I checked, they had the chance to impeach him a year ago, and they refused.

“As the costs of looking the other way became more apparent, the depth of the denial only grew more deeper. Now the debt is due, and the costs of indulging a wannabe tyrant will haunt the Republican party for the foreseeable future.”https://t.co/29x2Gukg9z

— Josh Kraushaar (@HotlineJosh) January 13, 2021

Caity Weaver/Twitter:

This is why we stan local news!

A West Virginia legislator streamed, then deleted, video of himself storming the capitol https://t.co/oPlBVQVKdO

— Dave Weigel (@daveweigel) January 7, 2021

Support your local paper!!!! For the love of God!!!!!

NEW: PA state Sen. Doug Mastriano and former state rep. Rick Saccone among Trump supporters who occupied U.S. Capitol. Both are known to peddle in conspiracy theories. https://t.co/jXL475AOdP

— Pittsburgh City Paper (@PGHCityPaper) January 7, 2021

🎵LoOoOcal news! Interesting news about the loOoOocals!🎵

Former Oakland Police Officer Jurell Snyder was among the mob that attacked the Capitol yesterday. In this interview he defends the attempted coup and repeats conspiracy theories about voting fraud.https://t.co/T8ziliZ5Fb

— Darwin BondGraham (@DarwinBondGraha) January 7, 2021

Tennessee said 🗣 I know that man! That’s the governor’s pastor!

JUST UP: @mort713 and I worked together to identify a short list of Tennesseeans in the DC mob yesterday, including @GovBillLee's pastor. Please take a moment to read really concerning comments, including references to 6MWE. My latest for @TNLookout. https://t.co/GOE8HaSjYR

— Abby Lee Hood (@AbbyLeeHood) January 8, 2021