National Review Online
Sunday, January 17, 2021
Liz Cheney undertook a stunning act of political courage
last week.
She voted to impeach President Trump with a statement
meant to leave a mark and make it as hard as possible for fellow Republicans to
turn away from his misconduct. She said of Trump’s behavior before and after
the riot that “there has never been a greater betrayal by a President of the
United States of his office and his oath to the Constitution.”
Cheney did this, not as a moderate member of the House
from a suburban swing district, but as a conservative from Wyoming’s at-large
district.
She didn’t do it as an obscure backbencher, but the No. 3
in the House GOP leadership.
She didn’t do it as a long-serving member about to
retire, but as a politician with considerable room to rise and presumably
ambitions to do so.
She did it knowing that she would put a political target
on her back, and indeed the backlash was instantaneous, with calls to boot her
from leadership and threats of a primary challenger. Cheney’s rejoinder is that
hers was a vote of conscience, a word and concept that some of her critics need
to reacquaint themselves with.
Various members of the House Freedom Caucus, including
Jim Jordan (incredibly enough, now a recipient of the Presidential Medal of
Freedom) were particularly vocal in denouncing Cheney. By and large, that group
has gone from asking, “How can we afford the out-of-control spending in
Washington?” to, when Trump tells them to jump, asking, “How high?”
Matt Gaetz, the Florida representative who has made a
name for himself as a clownish C-list Trump-world celebrity, predictably
declared war on Cheney on Hannity.
To his credit, House minority leader Kevin McCarthy has
defended her and said he supports her staying in leadership.
Reasonable people can disagree on the advisability of
impeachment, but there shouldn’t be disagreement that the Republican Party
needs more officeholders like Liz Cheney who take their responsibilities
seriously and are willing to go their own way when they believe it is right.
Brava.
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