Forty-four former US Senators from both major US parties on Monday warned of threats to US democracy under US President Donald Trump and a “constitutional crisis” for the country.
They said the convergence of events — as special counsel Robert Mueller probes whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia to tilt the 2016 US presidential election in his favor, and a soon-to-be Democrat-led US House of Representatives starts launching related investigations — made for highly precarious political waters.
The 44 include Democrats, such as Bill Bradley and John Kerry, and Republicans, such as Ben Nighthorse Campbell and Richard Lugar, and they painted the situation ominously as a constitutional crisis.
“It is our shared view that we are entering a dangerous period, and we feel an obligation to speak up about serious challenges to the rule of law, the Constitution, our governing institutions and our national security,” the former senators wrote in a Washington Post opinion piece.
“We are at an inflection point in which the foundational principles of our democracy and our national security interests are at stake, and the rule of law and the ability of our institutions to function freely and independently must be upheld,” they wrote.
“At other critical moments in our history, when constitutional crises have threatened our foundations, it has been the Senate that has stood in defense of our democracy. Today is once again such a time,” the group said.
They urged current and future members of the US Senate to make sure that “partisanship or self-interest not replace national interest.”
Bipartisan cooperation has plunged with Trump in power. How lawmakers in both houses of the US Congress handle the crisis will be key to how the nation handles Trump’s being its first sitting US president implicated in a felony.
Referred to as “Individual-1,” Trump was directly implicated in ordering payments to alleged ex-lovers — which prosecutors believe sought to influence the outcome of the election.
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