[Originally published in the Vermont Journal. No linky, as they’ve done something weird to the site. This is my final column, as the paper’s been sold and – temporarily, at least – mothballed. Thanks to editor John Bauer for the fun (if brief) experience as a print-person.]
The question of Presidential impeachment was thrown around before November, and it’s a question that won’t go away in the election’s aftermath. A question as to whether or not the breaking of more than 750 duly passed laws (according to the Boston Globe), and the trampling of the 6th, 4th and 8th amendments (according to the Courts) through acts such as the reserved “right” to declare any citizen an “unlawful combatant” and lock them up indefinitely without charges or access to counsel, rise to the level of “high crimes and misdemeanors” specified under the Constitution as grounds for – what amounts to – the ultimate job performance review and disciplinary hearing for our nation’s number one employee.
It’s a question that begs an answer.
I’m a blogger, which makes me an internet geek of sorts. As a geek, I know the old Star Trek series a lot better than I probably should admit to. To this day my favorite moment in the series was when Captain Kirk explains to an evil, bearded, doppelganger version of Spock the simple logic of social activism.
“If change is inevitable, predictable, beneficial – doesn’t logic demand that you be a part of it?”
It’s a powerful line that speaks to the responsibility of all of us not simply to be spectators of history, but to take part in it. Unfortunately, Democratic lawmakers have a tendency to head directly for the calmest waters in the interest of stability for stability’s sake. Of course, it’s no coincidence that the calmest waters are usually also the shallowest.
I share the belief that our responsibilities demand we act on what is right, even if that action is inconvenient. The transgressions of this administration show no signs of abating under the new Congress in light of the President’s self-appointed “signing statement” authority, through which he brazenly rewrites congressional laws to suit his own agenda and dares any and all to challenge him otherwise.
But that’s not even the point, is it? If the standard of impeachment is the Lewinsky scandal, this President has left the line in the dust. If we’re to be concerned with the integrity of process, of fairness, and of the basic tenets of law and order, it seems clear that an accounting must be made if the Constitutional impeachment provisions are to have any meaning.
It can’t be enough, to simply wipe the slate clean and pretend nothing happened, any more than it would in a court of law. To do so would be to cast impeachment forever as a purely political process – and if that’s truly all it will ever amount to, we should be doing away with it altogether.
Whether or not the US Congress will step up to the plate remains to be seen, but the responsibility not simply to watch from the sidelines but to act demands that we all do our part to defend our nation and it’s laws. For me and most people I know, that means speaking out.
For the Vermont House and Senate, it means much, much more.
A little known, seldom-used but recognized Congressional procedure allows impeachment proceedings for federal officeholders to be initiated in a state legislature. Activists urged the Vermont House and Senate to take up the matter, but were rebuffed despite a groundswell that drew headlines across the country. “There isn’t enough time” we were told. “It wouldn’t go anywhere in a Republican Congress” we were told.
This session activists will doubtless be dismissed with the reciprocal argument; that since Democrats are in power, there is no need to bring the matter up.
Poppycock. If we hold our American principles in any esteem, we must demand accountability of our chief executive when he acts contrary to those principles. Without accountability, there are no principles. Without principles, there is no America. And if America is all of us, we all have a responsibility to defend it by whatever tools we have available to us. As a private citizen, I do not have the tool of impeachment available. By virtue of their offices, our State Representatives and Senators do.
“Push `til it gives” Kirk admonished.
I, for one, choose to ask no less of my elected representatives