In 1998, Lindsay Graham spoke out
against President Clinton stonewalling Congress by repeating the words used
against Nixon during his Impeachment stonewalling. “....‘You’re taking
impeachment away from us. You’re becoming the judge and jury. It is not your
job to tell us what we need. It is your job to comply with the things we need
to provide oversight over you. The day Richard Nixon failed to answer that
subpoena is the day that he was subject to impeachment because he took the
power of Congress away from Congress and became the judge and jury.’”
He
made a strong argument even if the words were not his own. His 2012, another
country boy, Trey Gowdy made the same argument during one of the—there were
many—Benghazi hearings.
“The notion that you can withhold information and documents from
Congress no matter whether you are the party in power or not in power is wrong.
Respect for the rule of law must mean something, irrespective of the
vicissitudes of political cycles.”
Today both men are taking drastically different approaches as they
attempt to defend Trump’s refusal to provide information to Congressional
oversight committees. Naturally, their previous words are being held against
them and they are being portrayed as hypocrites. This is too easy and overlooks
a more serious problem.
My understanding of hypocrisy is when you stand for something and then,
in a moment of weakness or convenience, or whatever, you turn on yourself and
your own values. This seems to be what’s going on with Graham and Gowdy, but I
think we are missing the bigger picture.
In the initial examples, when Graham and Gowdy appeared to be standing
up for something, what they really were doing was grandstanding. Today, they are
merely grandstanding for something different. They haven’t flipped on their
values, but rather boarded another showboat.
This makes them habitual stooges, not hypocrites.
By 1998, Republicans had been trying to get Clinton on something for six
years and weren’t having much luck. When they finally got something on him,
rather than represent a high crime or misdemeanor, it looked more like petty
crime and misbehavior. Still, he lied about it and Republicans felt they had
the goods on him. Clinton fought back, which eventually led Graham to pretend
to be a patriot.
In 2012, when Gowdy was going through his “I could have been a founding
father, but I was born too late” period, Republicans had been going after the
Obama administration since the day he took office. Turns out he was born in
America and wasn’t a secret Muslim and giving more people health insurance wasn’t
his attempt to destroy America.
Nevertheless, when Benghazi happened, Republicans breathed a sigh of
relief. Finally, something was working in their favor. Again, after it was
proven numerous times that there was nothing there, the Obama administration
and Clinton (this time Hillary) fought back, giving Gowdy an opportunity to do
his best imitation of Graham doing his imitation of the Watergate impeachment
panel.
One can believe both men are lying now or that they were lying then. I
chose to believe that just like the president, they lie every time they open
their mouths.
Grandstanding is grandstanding. Graham and Gowdy may be spouting
hypocritical drivel, but the bottom line is they never stood for anything
except: Republicans good, Democrats bad. They haven’t lost their way. They’ve
simply lost their minds.
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