Trump will go and the only question is how
“Perceptions,” by Gerry Warner
It may be too early to call President Donald Trump
toast, but surely the bread has been placed in the toaster!
Trump is now a heartbeat away from being directly investigated
by the FBI over collusion between his election team and the Russian SVR, the
Foreign Intelligence Service (read spy agency) that was preceded by the
infamous Soviet KGB.
It doesn’t get much more serious than that.
Talk about Watergate revisited. You think that’s an
exaggeration? Well consider what New York Times columnist David Leonhardt said
in the most influential newspaper in America Tuesday: “Our president is a liar, and we need to find out how serious
his latest lies are.” That’s about as direct as it gets and carries a thousand
times more force than any Facebook posting or Twitter tweet.
In fact, in normal circumstances, such an
incendiary statement would be an outright libel and career ender for any
journalist especially one writing for the most prestigious newspaper in the
United States. But rest assured, Leonhardt isn’t going to be sued by Trump or
any other fatuous blowhard. Not even when Leonhardt went on to say, “the current president of the United States lies. He lies in ways that no
American politician ever has before” adding Trump was the one that started the
malicious “birther” controversy by claiming former President Barck Obama was
born outside the US as well as a host of other lies including originally
denying his remarks over the groping of women.
And what was Trump’s response to the latest firebombs
launched at him by the Times? He does as he always does. He went back to
campaign mode, holding a rally before 18,000 adoring fans in Louisville,
Kentucky where he talked about repealing Obama Care, tax cuts, the “wall” –
anything but FBI Director James Comey’s shockwave announcement the same day
that the federal force had launched a formal investigation into allegations
that Trump’s election team had colluded with Russian spies to discredit Hillary
Clinton in order to ease the way for his stunning upset electoral victory.
In the face of this momentous allegation by the most
powerful police force in the land, Trump was conspicuously silent and did the
only thing he knows how to do, reverting to campaign mode in front of thousands
of sycophantic supporters. And yes, the
world has seen this kind of cheap rhetoric before in the 1930s. The location
was Nuremberg, Germany. And we all know what that led to.
But people aren’t being conned that easily this time
around. In the U.K, bookies are taking bets on Trump’s impeachment and the odds
have pulled close to even. But most political pundits think impeachment is
unlikely until at least the mid-term elections in 2018 which could be a
disaster for the Republicans. In the early days of Watergate, few believed
Nixon would be impeached either. But as the scandal deepened, even Nixon
himself began to believe impeachment was a possibility and chose to resign
rather than face the humiliation of being impeached by Congress. And when you
consider that former National Security Director Michael Flynn has already been
forced to resign for lying about meeting with Russian intelligence agents and
calls are ringing for Attorney General Jeff Sessions to resign for doing
essentially the same thing, Trump’s impeachment becomes more than a fantasy.
Even your humble correspondent believes the chances of
a Trump impeachment are far greater than Toronto winning the Stanley Cup. My
reasons are simple. If, as many predict, the Republicans fare badly in the
mid-term elections, it will finally dawn on the Neanderthals in the Republican
hierarchy that sticking with Trump will be like sticking with the captain of
the Titanic and pull the entire party into the briny deep. And when that
realization hits home dear readers, the Republican backroom will force Trump to
resign in another dark chapter in American political history. Or Trump will
pull a Nixon and resign himself.
Would I lie to you? Not a chance.
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist and former City Councillor, who was
“resigned” from office by the voters, but not impeached.