First, we have commenter “Gregory Harper” declaring this:
This is not about standing with Trump, this is about standing for the rule of law and the Constitution of the United States. Unfortunately, there are too many Republicans who are so blinded by their dislike of Trump that they are willing to not only abandon any conservative principles that they once claimed to hold, but to abandon the very principles on which this country was founded.
Agreed.
Then commenter “Mike K” quoted Gregory Harper’s comment, and responded with this:
Yes. I have seen almost no response by the majority of Republicans in Congress.
I often see comments like Mike K’s, stating a perception that the GOP hasn’t said this or that or the other thing, and excoriating them for it. I, too, think every single Republican – and even most Democrats – should be speaking out forcefully against what’s happening, and although it no longer surprises me it continues to deeply disappoint and even anger me.
But my response to comments such as Mike K’s is usually this sort of thing: have you checked what the majority of Republicans in Congress have said? After all, there are 222 GOP House members and 49 GOP senators.
Obviously, my question is somewhat rhetorical, because it would take an awfully long time and a lot of work to check every Twitter feed, every GOP member of Congress’ web page, and videos on YouTube that might be relevant, and ascertain for oneself whether it’s the case that the majority of the GOP members of Congress had not responded at all.
In addition, it may be that some of them haven’t responded yet and plan to do so soon. But more importantly, not every single GOP member who does speak up is going to be spotlighted or prominently quoted. In fact, why would the MSM focus on their critiques of the indictment, especially if those critiques might be persuasive? Spoils the narrative. So there’s really no way to know how many people have spoken up, unless a person is willing to put in an enormous amount of time and effort.
But what I often do is to check some prominent GOP politicians who come to mind. For me, the first was Ted Cruz. Here’s what I found:
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas said Monday the timing of the latest indictment of former President Donald Trump by a Georgia grand jury is “nakedly political” and that it is another attempt of election interference.
“Of course, it is,” Cruz told Fox News when asked if the indictment is an effort to interfere with the 2024 election. “The timing is nakedly political. Every time more bad news comes out about Hunter Biden or Joe Biden, you can set a stopwatch within hours some clown goes in and indicts Donald Trump again.” …
… “It’s the same thing as Alvin Bragg, the wild George Soros partisan in New York. It’s the same thing as [Attorney General] Merrick Garland and [special counsel] Jack Smith. … What they want to do, they want a trial to attack Donald Trump; they’d like a trial in September or October of next year right before the election. The other people, I’m not going to speculate, the other nine. We’ll find out [this was before the names had been announced].
“Frankly, there were nine people who were unlucky enough to be standing somewhere in or around Donald Trump. Their target is political. This is not the rule of law. This is not enforcing the law fairly.”
Next up, Kevin McCarthy:
Marco Rubio:
Then I thought of Lindsey Graham – a sort of RINO who sometimes is sort of a Trump defender, and a search led me to this article entitled: “Lindsey Graham and Ted Cruz lead Republican reaction to Trump’s fourth indictment: ‘I’m pissed,’ Sen Ted Cruz says in response to the indictment.” It’s interesting that it’s in a British paper. Some excerpts:
Mr Cruz (R – Texas), who led efforts to try and challenge the 2020 presidential election results, appeared on Sean Hannity’s Fox News programme decrying the indictment, before the release of any details.
“I’m pissed at these over and over and over again, if they’re indictments, it’ll be the fourth indictment of Donald Trump” Mr Cruz, who lost the Republican nomination for president to Mr Trump in 2016, said. “This is disgraceful. Our country’s over 200 years old. We’ve never once indicted a former president, or a candidate or a leading candidate for president and this is Joe Biden and this is the Democrats weaponizing the justice system because they’re afraid of the voters.”
Similarly, Sen Lindsey Graham (R – South Carolina) told Fox News how Mr Trump spent more on legal fees than he did on campaigning for president. Mr Graham had attempted to avoid testifying before Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s team as she probed into Mr Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia but ultimately testified in November of last year.
“The American people can decide whether they want him to be president or not,” he said. “This should be decided at the ballot box and not in a bunch of liberal jurisdictions trying to put the man in jail. They’re weaponising the law in this country. They’re trying to take Donald Trump down.”
Then the article quoted criticism of the indictment by Marjorie Taylor Greene, Kevin McCarthy, and Marsha Blackburn, as well as these members of Congress:
House Republican Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik called Ms Willis a “Far Left radical” district attorney who was weaponising her office.
“This blatant interference by the Far Left will not work,” she said. “President Trump will defeat these bogus charges and win back the White House in 2024.”
The X account for the Republican majority on the House Judiciary Committee, which Rep Jim Jordan (R-OH) leads, sent out a series of posts criticising the indictment.
I was surprised that even Chris Christie chimed in; I wasn’t expecting anything from him except “Goodie, goodie!” This actually is only marginally better than that:
Mr Christie explained that he believed there was no need for it after the federal indictment against Mr Trump that was handed down by Special Counsel Jack Smith’s Washington, DC grand jury investigation and argued Ms Willis was possibly driven by ego following her two-year probe at the state level.
Here are a few more:
“Another week, another sham indictment,” Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., said. “This time it’s a radical prosecutor in Fulton County who wants nothing more than to stop President Trump from participating in the 2024 Presidential Election.” …
“Today’s indictment is just the latest political attack in the Democrats’ WITCH HUNT against President Trump,” [Jim] Jordan posted on X. “He did nothing wrong!”
As I expected, nothing from McConnell or Mitt Romney.
Then I got tired and stopped. But the point is that plenty of GOP members have spoken out, but the news doesn’t filter down to most of us very easily and we have to go searching for it. So it’s a bad idea to make any assumptions without doing some fact-checking of your own.
It’s also the case that all these angry words don’t mean much. What about action? This post is about Congress, and I’m not at all sure they can do much about a non-federal actor such as Willis. As we’ve discussed before, they could impeach Garland, but their margin in the House is paper thin and I’m not sure the impeachment effort would succeed. Up to this point, it hasn’t gotten very far. And of course, Garland would never be convicted in the Senate, so removal isn’t in the picture.
Leaving Congress aside for a moment, here’s a suggestion for what Republicans could try: Lawfare. In a previous discussion of that possibility, I was unable to think of a specific charge or venue where it was likely to work, but that article I just linked had some practical and specific suggestions. Some of them might work, and they involve very real violations rather than trumped-up (forgive the pun) charges.
Reciprocal lawfare of this type is probably necessary because the Democrats must be made to fear some sort of tit-for-tat consequences. But it must be done intelligently and in venues where it is likely to succeed.
[NOTE: “Mike K’s” remark was limited to GOP members of Congress, but along the way I happened across this article on the pool of GOP presidential candidates. Here’s an excerpt:
Ramaswamy went beyond attacking the Georgia prosecutors bringing the charges, suggesting he’d be willing to assist in the former president’s legal defense.
“As someone who’s running for President against Trump, I’d volunteer to write the amicus brief to the court myself: prosecutors should not be deciding U.S. presidential elections, and if they’re so overzealous that they commit constitutional violations, then the cases should be thrown out & they should be held accountable,” Ramaswamy wrote on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter.
On Tuesday, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis denounced the indictment during a call with New England media outlets, promising to “end the weaponization of federal agencies like the DOJ and FBI.”
“I think it’s an example of this criminalization of politics,” DeSantis said. “I don’t think this is something that’s good for the country.”
More here on the further statements of DeSantis and others.]