Everyday Erinyes #187

 Posted by at 8:56 am  Politics
Oct 122019
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

So, the House of Representatives is full-on investigating Donald John Trump with the intent of impeachment. If you, or someone you know, hasn’t noticed, that’s because Trump is stonewalling on allowing either documents or testimony to be provided to the committees concerned (in itself an impeachable offense, of course. All this is quite frustrating. It won’t, of course, derail the investigation, but it may – it is intended to – delay it substantially So when I found this Creative Commons article which discusses the effect of delay, along with other factors, I thought it was well worth sharing.

There are many who are clamoring for immediate, or at least speedy, results. My take is that, to be blunt, if there may end up being face-eating leopards around, we should at the very least be aware that we also have faces which could be eaten.
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Investigations usually hurt a president’s public reputation – but Trump isn’t usual

Douglas L. Kriner, Cornell University and Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley

Will the House impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump ultimately have any effect?

Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi had long resisted calls for impeachment, arguing that it is “just not worth it.” However, the Trump administration’s initial refusal to release to Congress documents concerning the intelligence community whistleblower’s complaint about the administration’s treatment of Ukraine encouraged the Speaker to cross that line.

We have explored the relationship between hearings into alleged executive branch misconduct and public opinion in our 2016 book, “Investigating the President: Congressional Checks on Presidential Power.”

Investigations often damage a president’s reputation in the public eye – but that may not matter to a historically unpopular president like Trump.

A check on the presidency

The power to oversee the executive branch is among Congress’ most important powers. Investigations have historically afforded Congress a meaningful check on an increasingly powerful presidency.

Perhaps the most important way that investigations check presidential power is by lowering public support for the president. By eroding the president’s reserve of political capital, investigators can change how politicians behave, both in Congress and in the White House.

This can create momentum for new legislation, encourage presidential concessions, or simply weaken the president’s political position with broad consequences.

In our book, we built a comprehensive data set of all congressional investigations of the executive branch from 1898 through 2014.

We then merged it with presidential approval data, which first became regularly available in 1953, to see how investigations affected approval ratings from Eisenhower to Obama.

Even after statistically accounting for the possibility that low approval ratings might also encourage Congress to investigate an administration more aggressively, we found that investigations systematically eroded public support for the president.

Historically, every 20 additional days of investigative hearings cost the president roughly 2.5% in the polls.

So a short-term investigation is survivable. But a long-term investigation could seriously diminish the president’s political capital and even threaten his or his party’s electoral fortunes.

How Trump is different

Will the current impeachment inquiry have the same corrosive effect on support for President Trump? The allegations of abuse of power are more serious than those driving many of the investigations in our historical data.

However, there are reasons to believe that support for Trump may be more resilient.

President Trump’s approval rating has been remarkably stable over the past three years. This suggests to us that the power of events to move public opinion has diminished substantially.

President Trump has had both a lower ceiling -– his first term approval ratings were historically low, given the strength of the economy – and a higher floor than his predecessors.

What’s more, partisan lines have hardened to an extent that is arguably unparalleled in the past century.

Here’s how that partisanship is relevant: There is nothing unusual about the members of a president’s party defending him in the face of accusations of wrongdoing. But in past cases, there generally was a reasonably sized faction of members of the same party in Congress who were willing to take on the president when his administration’s actions were particularly egregious.

In today’s intensely polarized Congress, it is unlikely that there is any revelation that would persuade more than a small handful of Republicans to turn on President Trump. Absent this, public opinion is unlikely to move.

At the same time, many congressional Republicans are standing by Trump because they believe that is what their voters want. Staunchly partisan voters encourage elites to toe the party line and use more inflammatory language. That, in turn, only reinforces voters’ inclination to stick with their party.

Checks and balances

Investigations offer Congress a tool to push back against presidential power when it cannot legislate.

However, for investigations to succeed and produce meaningful political or policy change, they usually must be able to shine a light on administration misdeeds and move the needle of public opinion. To do so, investigators must have access to the information they require.

The Trump administration has refused to cooperate with congressional subpoenas and requests for information, and continues to receive the unconditional support of most Republicans for the president. That suggests that the impeachment inquiry, like other investigative efforts of the 116th Congress, faces severe obstacles that earlier investigations had not confronted.

The kinds of revelations that in the past surely would have been sufficient to move the public and elected officials may no longer be sufficient. The question is whether the revelations in Trump’s case will surpass the barriers imposed by today’s intensely polarized politics.

[ Expertise in your inbox. Sign up for The Conversation’s newsletter and get a digest of academic takes on today’s news, every day. ]The Conversation

Douglas L. Kriner, Clinton Rossiter Professor in American Institutions, Cornell University and Eric Schickler, Co-Director of the Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California, Berkeley

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, you probably know even better than we do that every enterprise which involves human beings is more or less a crap shoot. An action designed to accomplish one goal can have that effect, or it can have the opposite effect, or it can just fizzle. I think we can be pretty sure that House Democrats, particularly our Democratic leadership, are considering all of the factors above. We do not even have the opportunity of jury selection. The jury for this trial is the United States Senate, and it’s already been selected. There have been a few hopeful signs, but there are no guarantees. And we must have hard evidence.

The Furies and I will be back.

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  6 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #187”

  1. I’ve been reading, and re-reading the ‘how trump is different’, & the ‘checks and balances’. 
    Informational post, with great facts and figures too,in the sections. 
    Yea, dt is different, that’s for sure. (not in a good way, either). 

    Thank you, Joanne (and Furies) for an excellent and well written post. 

  2. Very well done, JD! 04

    I realize this may be an exercise in futility, but I think that we will lose far more face by failure to act than by failure to convict.

  3. I have valued the contents at The Conversation a whole lot–including science and quality research.  Great source Joanne.
    The current trigger has moved polls to supporting investigation by the public–beyond the poll’s error rate majority level.
    Read today that another GOP REP. was involved in the Ukraine…
    One element might prove to be how many criminal cases and/or resignations surface related to Ukraine–and how many names repeat from the Mueller investigation.  This issue is viewed as less complex than Mueller’s scope and thus may penetrate both more supporters/on the fence folks and GOP members of Congress.
    Keeping it going with media coverage daily until evidence received somehow may be the essential, no matter how long that takes.  Given the loss in court yesterday on supoena by Congress for tax returns, it may be that area leading people to abandon.

  4. Thanks for posting this excellent article, JD.

    It is doubtful that an impeachment of Trump will lead to him being removed from office; that much was pretty clear from the start. But, as TomCat noted, something had to be done now. Letting his crimes go, has only led Trump to believe he’s really above the law. At least now he’s been told he’s not and certainly all those who may be impeached along with him know they’re not. That may tone things down a bit in the Oval Office, keeping Trump and his acolytes from doing even more harm to the nation until the situation is somewhat rectified by the outcome of the next election.

  5. Great article. 
    tRump certainly is different. 
    Like he can do no evil, even through he speaks and does evil acts daily/weekly. Which confuses me how much he gets away with, Something isn’t right here at all.
    I hope that they CAN and WILL bring him down and punish him and his cronies 100%.
    Thanks Joanne

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