House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on
Friday touted a campaign to formally censure President Trump following
his controversial response to the violence that resulted from a white
supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va.
“Every day, the president gives us further evidence of why such a
censure is necessary,” Pelosi said in a written statement. “Democrats
will use every avenue to challenge the repulsiveness of President
Trump’s words and actions.”
Democratic Reps. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, Jerrold Nadler of New
York and Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey filed a formal resolution
of censure Friday during a pro forma session.
“We’re at a very significant juncture here,” Coleman told The Washington
Post. “We can either have peace, or we can have this president fuel and
fan the fires of violence, and that is scary. He needs to be held
accountable.”
The resolution asks to censure Trump for his “inadequate response to the
violence” and “failure to immediately and specifically name and condemn
the white supremacist groups responsible for actions of domestic
terrorism.”
It also takes issue with comments Trump made Tuesday from Trump Tower
that some “very fine people” were among those who participated in the
white-supremacist march that led to the death of a Charlottesville woman
and injured 19 others.
Censure is a largely symbolic vote that doesn’t carry a lot of legal
weight with it. It’s basically a strongly worded letter of disapproval
that’s on the record.
“Indeed, with each passing day, it becomes clearer that the Republican
Congress must declare whether it stands for our sacred American values
or with the president who embraces white nationalism,” Pelosi said.
So far, the resolution has 79 co-sponsors. No Republicans have signed
on.
The last time the House censured a president was in 1848. Lawmakers
rebuked President James K. Polk for starting the Mexican-American War
without congressional approval. The Senate voted to censure President
Andrew Jackson in 1834 for trying to dismantle the Bank of the United
States.
|
|