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  • The Republican Party has some decisions to make.

  • In early January the Capitol was stormed by Trump supporters.

  • Five people died, including a police officer.

  • A month on, Donald Trump faces an impeachment trial again.

  • This time accused of inciting this violence.

  • And whether guilty or not, this is a man who repeatedly undermined

  • America's election, who received more than 70 million votes,

  • and whose son sees it like this.

  • This isn't

  • their Republican

  • Party any more.

  • This is Donald Trump's Republican

  • Party.

  • The world is watching what the Republicans do about Trump.

  • This impeachment trial is the Democrats seeking to sanction him

  • despite him having left office.

  • And on impeachment, the Republicans are nothing, if not consistent.

  • This was from the first trial in 2019.

  • I'm not an impartial juror. This is a political process,

  • there is not anything judicial about it. Impeachment

  • is a political decision.

  • And once again, many Republicans appear to have made up their minds.

  • I'll be brief. I oppose this article of impeachment and I yield back.

  • For a guilty verdict, 17 of them will need to vote

  • with the Democrats and that looks unlikely because this is a story

  • of the backlash that didn't last. In the aftermath of the Capitol,

  • Republicans took turns to condemn the president.

  • The president bears responsibility

  • for Wednesday's attack on Congress by mob rioters.

  • I think the president's rhetoric was irresponsible. I think it was

  • reckless and I don't think it was remotely helpful.

  • All I can say

  • is count me out. Enough is enough.

  • And remember Mitch McConnell saying he wouldn't be an impartial juror.

  • Well, in the aftermath of the Capitol, The New York Times reported

  • that he was open to impeachment. And Liz Cheney, the number three

  • Republican in the House of Representatives, voted to impeach.

  • 'Republicans begin turning on Trump,' Politico told us.

  • But most didn't do so for long. By late January, Senior Republican

  • Kevin McCarthy was visiting Donald Trump to talk about the mid-term elections.

  • Despite Trump's attacks on American democracy,

  • he remains part of Republicans' thinking. And not for the first time,

  • people are asking: 'Where is the limit for Republicans?'

  • It's a question they're asked because of Trump.

  • And because of newly elected Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.

  • She supported the QAnon conspiracy theory

  • about Satan-worshipping paedophiles.

  • She's promoted conspiracy theories about 9/11,

  • about school shootings being staged,

  • about body doubles being used on the Supreme Court, about the 2018

  • California wildfires being ignited by Jewish space lasers.

  • And that's not even a comprehensive list. This was the message

  • from the party's leadership after a meeting on her future.

  • This Republican Party is a very big tent. Everyone's invited in.

  • To that, Republican Senator Mitt Romney says:

  • 'A big tent is not large enough to both accommodate Conservatives

  • and kooks.' But arguably that's exactly what's already happened.

  • Donald Trump has spent years pushing unsubstantiated conspiracy

  • theories - from Barack Obama not being born in America,

  • to wind turbines causing cancer, to this election being stolen.

  • Once you've chosen him as president, where do you go?

  • Well, Liz Cheney gave her answer when she voted to impeach Donald Trump.

  • But after that there was a push to oust her from the party,

  • including from Donald Trump Jr. Well, she survived that.

  • It was a very resounding acknowledgement that we

  • need to go forward together and we need to go forward in a way that

  • helps us beat back the really dangerous and negative Democrat policies.

  • This, though, isn't really about policy. What we are seeing is a

  • battle about boundaries, about what is and isn't politically acceptable.

  • But to what degree is that battle really about Trump?

  • This Time article argues: 'Trumpism will live on,

  • not because of his hold on the party, but because of what the party

  • had become long before he came to town.' But for years,

  • there has been the idea that Trump isn't really who Republicans are.

  • Have a listen to Mitch McConnell.

  • The mob was fed lies,

  • they were provoked by the president and other powerful people.

  • But if that's the case, why is the party still dealing with him now?

  • It may be a straight political calculation that keeping Trump on

  • side helps, but it could also be about something more fundamental.

  • This is the Congressman Adam Kinzinger.

  • The Republican Party has lost its way.

  • If we are to lead again,

  • we need to muster the courage to remember who we are.

  • We need to remember what we believe and why we believe it.

  • But perhaps it's not that the party has forgotten,

  • more that some of its leaders haven't reconciled with what it has become.

  • This is the Congressman Matt Gaetz.

  • Right now there's an identity crisis in the Republican Party.

  • There are some in Washington who believe that we've got to purge

  • Trumpism and then we've got to do whatever is necessary to get back in

  • the good graces of the corporate PACs that have sworn off some Republicans.

  • I take a different view.

  • Trump's impeachment matters. Arguably, what follows matters more.

  • We're about to find out what the Republican Party stands for.

  • The nature of American democracy is directly tied to that outcome.

The Republican Party has some decisions to make.

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