Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) fielded reporters’ questions yesterday afternoon, and was asked a question his party has struggled with for months: why should an American president be allowed to press foreign governments to target his domestic rivals?
The Republicans’ Senate leader not only chose not to answer, he acted as if the question has been deemed irrelevant. “We’ve completed it, we’ve listened to the arguments, we voted, it’s in the rearview mirror,” McConnell replied.
Around the same time, Vice President Mike Pence — who, incidentally, was 19 Senate votes from being elevated to the nation’s highest office — added, “It’s over, America.”
Pence didn’t exactly specify what “it” referred to, but if he meant the entire ordeal — Donald Trump’s scandal, the scrutiny of his misconduct, the search for truths the White House and its allies fought to cover up — has come and gone, the vice president and other Republicans are likely to be disappointed.
The House impeachment managers collectively wrote a Washington Post op-ed that’s well worth your time, though it included a line that stood out for me as especially noteworthy.
Throughout the trial, new and incriminating evidence against the president came to light almost daily, and there can be no doubt that it will continue to emerge in books, in newspapers or in congressional hearings.
Quite right. To see this mess as an annoyance that’s suddenly in our “rearview mirror,” now that a rigged trial has come and gone, is to miss the fact that “we’re still in the middle of it,” as Rachel noted on the show last night.









