Donald Trump’s behavior is getting so out of control that even conservatives are calling for a second impeachment.
This week, The Bulwark founder Charlie Sykes told lawmakers that it would be advisable for them to begin the paper work to impeach Trump for a second time if he continues to make threats of invoking martial law to stay in power.
On Monday, the conservative Sykes led off with a headline reading, “Impeach Him….Again?”
Noting a New York Times report stating, “During an appearance on the conservative Newsmax channel this week, Mr. Flynn pushed for Mr. Trump to impose martial law and deploy the military to “rerun” the election. At one point in the meeting on Friday, Mr. Trump asked about that idea,” Sykes wrote, “Wait. Back up. The president asked about what?”
The conservative went on to point out that Trump “sort of denied this” before adding that there may be something to the reporting.
“The increasingly isolated, paranoid president who refuses to concede, and continues to flood the zone with conspiracy theories, fabrications, and baseless allegations, is asking about the possibility of imposing martial law?” he wrote, before linking to more reports from Axios that the president is making White House insiders “nervous.”
Taking his cues from Bulwark columnist and former RNC spokesperson Tim Miller who tweeted, “Impeach him again,” and former President George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum, who wrote “Plotting a military coup seems like the kind of behaviour that impeachment and removal were invented for,” Sykes agreed with their assessments.
“What if Trump did try to declare martial law? Seize voting machines? Attempt to deploy the military? What stops him? Anything? Indignant editorials? Outraged segments on cable tv? Firmly worded emails from Marco Rubio?” he asked.
*Whispers*
Impeach him again.
— Tim Miller (@Timodc) December 19, 2020
Plotting a military coup seems like the kind of behaviour that impeachment and removal were invented for
— David Frum (@davidfrum) December 19, 2020
Cautioning to not rush to impeachment, the conservative suggested it is time to make plans — just in case.
“Perhaps, an impeachment should be in the queue ready to go,” he advised. “At a minimum, someone should be thinking about the ultimate Trumpsday scenario, and start drafting the articles that could be quickly acted upon (maybe with snap votes in both the House and Senate?)”