For Republicans who are weary of trying to deny the obvious about Donald Trump and his attempt to force Ukraine's president to give him ammunition against Joe Biden, there is another option. In Thursday's hearing, Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, tried it out.
Trump's conduct was "inappropriate," "misguided" and "undermined our national security," Hurd said. But, he suggested, this "bungling" did not rise to the level of an impeachable offense, much less a justification for removing a president.
Hurd didn't develop this argument, but he managed to separate himself a bit from his belligerent see-no-evil Republican colleagues on the Intelligence Committee. He pointed to a middle way that would let GOP members denounce the sin while showing mercy to the sinner.
It might be called the Joe Lieberman option. In September 1998, as Bill Clinton's possible impeachment loomed, the Connecticut Democrat took the Senate floor to castigate the president's "disgraceful behavior" — having sex with a White House intern and then denying it.
"It is wrong and unacceptable and should be followed by some measure of public rebuke and accountability," said Lieberman, alluding to the possibility of formally condemning Clinton. Many House Democrats favored censure as an alternative to impeachment, and the White House indicated the president could accept it. But when Republicans voted for impeachment, the option became moot.
After the past week's hearings, there can be no serious doubt that Trump withheld U.S. military aid to try to force Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to help him smear Biden and the Democratic Party.
His own appointees, notably Ambassador Gordon Sondland, say it happened. White House aides and State Department personnel working on Ukraine provided confirmation. His acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney admitted it, before reversing himself. If the July 25 call record left any glimmer of doubt, the witnesses in the hearings extinguished it.
The case would be stronger if all the people with direct knowledge, including Trump, would answer questions under oath, as those who testified before the Intelligence Committee did. But what has come out so far is plenty damning. As Henry David Thoreau noted, "Some circumstantial evidence is very strong, as when you find a trout in the milk."