Election year is packed with landmines that can cause embarrassing headlines, adverse legal rulings and other politically risky decisions for Trump.
Donald Trump was acquitted of high crimes in his impeachment trial Wednesday -- but could the unpredictable president now decide he's above the law? The question hangs over a nervous, divided Washington. For Trump, those votes are vindication of his insistence that he did nothing wrong in trying to get Ukraine to dig up dirt on Democratic election rival Joe Biden.
The moments before Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) delivered his speech announcing how he would vote in the Senate trial of President Trump felt like the run-up to Sen. John McCain's vote on ObamaCare repeal. Like the late Arizona Republican, you knew Romney would be reviled by some as history's greatest monster and celebrated by others as a national hero — and that the identities of these groups would flip in an instant depending on how the senator voted.Romney voted to convict Trump of abuse of power, becoming the only Republican to do so (he voted with the rest of his party to clear the president of obstruction of Congress). The Senate ultimately voted to keep Trump in power — a two-thirds majority was required to convict, instead the Republican majority voted to acquit — but Romney gave Democrats something the GOP could never get during Bill Clinton's Senate trial: a vote to remove from the president's party. With the remaining red state Democrats all voting to convict, that created a symbolic bipartisan vote against Trump. Two Democrats had voted against the articles of impeachment in the House.Right on cue following Romney's vote, two dueling Twitter hashtags appeared: MittRomneyIsMyHero versus RecallRomney. Romney finally fulfilled his Never Trump promise despite voting with the president more often than Trump ally Rand Paul. Among pro-Trump conservatives, it brought back bad memories of Romney flailing on the 2012 campaign trail. Liberals gained what The American Spectator's Tom Bethell has long called "strange new respect" while Never Trumpers said it was a reminder of the sterling personal character that was always there.The real story is more complicated. Romney is a decent man, especially by the standards of the rough-and-tumble world of politics. Even so, he has been a case study in political opportunism. He has totally reinvented himself several times depending on which electorate he was trying to appeal to in a given campaign.We suspect many politicians are capable of doing this. Romney proved it. He ran for the Senate in Massachusetts in 1994, promising to be more pro-choice than Ted Kennedy and claiming to have been an independent when Ronald Reagan was president. Then he considered running for office in Utah, writing a letter to The Salt Lake Tribune in 2001 saying, "I do not wish to be labeled pro-choice." But Romney instead wound up returning to Massachusetts to run for governor. "Let me make this very clear: I will preserve and protect a woman's right to choose," he said by way of reassuring Bay State social liberals. "I do not take the position of a pro-life candidate."Romney was elected governor, but decided to run for the Republican presidential nomination rather than seek a second term. "I am pro-life," he then wrote in a 2005 Boston Globe op-ed. "I believe that abortion is the wrong choice except in cases of incest, rape, and to save the life of the mother."Abortion is a small example of how Romney positioned himself as a moderate when that was the best way to get elected to the Senate from Massachusetts, tiptoed a few inches to the right to become viable in Utah, sauntered backwards again to win an election in Massachusetts, then became "severely conservative" to appeal to the national Republican primary electorate. In his first presidential run, he maneuvered himself to the right of John McCain and Rudy Giuliani. Now he represents one of the most Republican states in the country.Utah has probably allowed Romney to be his truest self politically. Mormon voters are conservative but haven't warmed to Trump to the same degree as evangelicals. But even in his Never Trump incarnation, there are questions. He had helped elevate Trump in the first place. In 2016, Romney was best positioned to deny Trump the presidency by running as an independent against him, as I wrote here at the time. He left that task to Evan McMullin instead. Once Trump was elected, Romney auditioned for secretary of state. Even his impeachment stand wasn't taken until all other Republicans were on the record for acquittal.It may be unfair given all his successes, but Romney is seen by critics as having an insatiable need for approval. The desire for Republicans who want to win rather than lose honorably is what parts of the Republican base loves about Trump. At the same time, if Trump was a little bit closer to Romney in temperament and humility, he would probably be able to do better than a 49 percent job approval rating amid low unemployment and solid economic growth.Mitt Romney is neither hero nor villain. He's a man trying to balance decency and ambition in a field where they too often conflict.Want more essential commentary and analysis like this delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for The Week's "Today's best articles" newsletter here.More stories from theweek.com How Trump's New York trusted traveler ban will punish the most conservative parts of the state How history will view Trump's impeachment Fox News' Brian Kilmeade is really mad that Romney would 'bring religion' into his impeachment decision
Even though Mitt Romney’s status as one of few Republicans willing to publicly criticize President Donald Trump is well known is his adopted home state, his unequivocal speech before voting yes on impeachment Wednesday caught many in Utah by surprise. Republicans in the state are unusually divided on the president, so while some were heartened to see Romney cast what he described as an agonizing vote dictated by his conscience, Trump supporters were left angry and frustrated. “There will be ramifications,” said Jason Perry, director of the University of Utah’s Hinckley Institute of Politics.
Just after the Senate voted to acquit President Trump on the two articles of impeachment against him, Senate Republicans announced Wednesday that they have requested Hunter Biden’s official travel records from the Secret Service.Senator Chuck Grassley, chair of the Finance Committee, and Senator Ron Johnson, chair of Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, requested the documents on former vice president Joe Biden's son as part of their ongoing investigation into his possible conflicts of interest involving his business dealings with China and his lucrative position on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.The committees are "reviewing potential conflicts of interest posed by the business activities of Hunter Biden and his associates during the Obama administration, particularly with respect to his business activities in Ukraine and China," the chairmen said in a letter to the director of the Secret Service.Johnson and Grassley previously requested from the Treasury Department any documents pertaining to the younger Biden and the the Ukrainian gas company, Burisma Holdings.House Democrats launched the impeachment inquiry after news broke about a July 25 phone call Trump had with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. During that call, Trump repeatedly asked Zelensky to investigate Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, over allegations that Biden leveraged his position as vice president to benefit his son, who held a lucrative position at a Ukrainian gas company. Biden was in charge of addressing corruption in Ukraine as vice president at the time.Lawmakers subsequently accused Trump of obstructing the congressional inquiry by refusing to provide documents and allow witnesses to testify.The White House temporarily withheld $391 million in U.S. military aid to Ukraine intended to help the country ward off Russian aggression, prompting suspicion of a quid pro quo scheme in which Trump is said to have finally released the aid in exchange for the promise that Biden’s conduct would be investigated.The Senate voted Wednesday afternoon to acquit Trump of the two impeachment charges brough by the House, abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka Trump has spoken up following his acquittal, saying the country needs to move forward "together" just as her father tweeted a trolling video to mark his success."This factional fever and incoherent, ill-conceived process has finally ended and the President has rightfully been acquitted," Ms Trump, who is also a White House adviser, wrote on Twitter. "It is time for our Country to move forward. Together."
Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) had some harsh words for his Republican colleagues following the acquittal of President Trump.Brown, like his fellow Democrats, voted to remove Trump from office on both articles of impeachment, abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. But he still wanted to get his point across. So in an op-ed in The New York Times he offered a scathing rebuke of the GOP for, as he sees it, cowering before the Trump administration.The senator noted many Republicans in the upper chamber were especially offended by the suggestion from lead House prosecutor Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) that they were warned by the White House to vote in favor of Trump or their heads "will be on a pike."Brown wasn't able to specifically back that claim up, but he did write that Republicans have privately agreed Trump is "reckless and unfit," while acknowledging his "lies" and admitting "what he did was wrong." (It's worth noting several Republican senators did publicly attest to the last point.) Brown said he's asked Republicans what they'll do to keep Trump in check after voting for his acquittal, but he only gets "shrugs and sheepish looks" in response. Read more at The New York Times.More stories from theweek.com Trump just won the Iowa Democratic caucuses Should financial markets be freaked out by coronavirus? America is doing so much better than you think