Fox News’ Chris Wallace interviewed Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) yesterday about Donald Trump’s possible impeachment, and when the discussion turned to public opinion and recent polling, the host reminded the congressman of a relevant detail:
“It’s clear that there is none of the bipartisan support that Speaker Pelosi said for months was essential to impeachment.”
Donald Trump, evidently, was pleased with Wallace’s observation.
Last week, Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) made a related point during a CNN interview:
“[T]he reason I’m offended by what’s going on in the House, this will be the first partisan impeachment in the history of our country.”
If the word “partisan” is going to be at the heart of the debate in the coming weeks, it’s worth pausing to appreciate its meaning and relevance.
Wallace’s observation, for example, was rooted in truth: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), a longtime skeptic of pursuing Trump’s impeachment, initially argued that bipartisanship was a prerequisite to drawing articles. It’s also true that polling shows roughly 1 in 10 Republican voters support the ongoing impeachment process, and that’s clearly a low number.
Pelosi shifted her position, however, when evidence emerged that Trump extorted a vulnerable U.S. ally, hoping to pressure a foreign government into helping him cheat in the 2020 election. Or put another way, the House Speaker revisited her impeachment standards, at least as they relate to public-opinion polling, when Trump’s brazen abuses of power left her little choice.
But Kennedy’s point is the more problematic one. As the Louisiana Republican sees it, the House’s impeachment inquiry isn’t just “partisan,” it’s “the first partisan impeachment in the history of our country.”









