The Trump administration has spent a considerable amount of time and effort pursuing an array of the president's purported “enemies,” frequently targeting Democratic notables. While the bulk of these actions have been in the form of bombastic Justice Department proclamations and hastily pursued prosecutions, many have failed to gain real traction, as judges and juries have rejected efforts to convict the president’s adversaries. As the DOJ stumbles in its pushes for punishment, some Democrats have begun to embrace the attention, leveraging the missteps for their own political purposes.
What did the commentators say? Democrats notched a “significant legal win” after the Justice Department failed to secure criminal charges against six lawmakers, including Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), who recorded a video reminding military members of their obligation to reject illegal orders, said Politico. Now, those six are “looking to gain political momentum” and “build their campaign war chests” after the experience. Given the “attention-driven political economy,” President Donald Trump’s attacks have become a “valuable boost” to Democrats, including some with an “eye toward future leadership positions in the party.”
“Sitting down, taking it and being quiet doesn’t actually make you safer,” said Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), one of the Democrats targeted over the video, to Roll Call. “Going on offense” seems to be the “only way to get their attention.” Trump officials who think they are “going to intimidate us and threaten and bully me into silence” have “another thing coming,” Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.), who also appeared in the video, said to Punchbowl News. “The tide is turning.”
There has always been a risk that Trump’s “politicized prosecutions will backfire,” said Emptywheel. They could boomerang by “empowering the political martyrs they create” and “exposing their own corruption.”
What next? Trump’s attacks on Democrats “often serve as their best fundraising tool,” said Politico. Oftentimes, Democrats’ “largest online fundraising spikes” occurred after a party member “stood up to or was attacked by Trump.”
The White House’s “attempt to strong-arm” Kelly into silence with lawsuits and threats of military demotions has prompted the former astronaut and fighter pilot to respond in ways that “looked and sounded downright presidential,” said The Boston Globe. Lawmakers who appeared alongside Kelly have also “hinted” at plans for a “case of their own” after escaping indictment this week, said Fox News. |