A year from the 2020 election, Democrats have gone all in on impeaching Donald Trump — with no certainty of whether the effort will help or hurt their bid to woo voters.
The new, soon-to-be-public phase of the House inquiry that Speaker Nancy Pelsoi launched yesterday has no explicit timetable, no defined scope and no indication the White House will cooperate. Not a single Republican backed it.
In many ways, Pelosi is taking Congress and the country into the exact politically perilous place she long sought to avoid, Steven T. Dennis and Billy House write.
With only the slimmest majority of public support in polls, many Democrats are nervous, knowing voters will hold them to account for whatever happens between now and then.
Much will hinge on whether Trump can maintain the enthusiasm of his base and the backing of more moderate Republicans and independents. The president will road-test his response at a rally today in Mississippi, a conservative stronghold.
It's not just the White House in play next year. The Senate and House majorities potentially are too. If public sentiment shifts over the inquiry, the lack of Republican defections from Trump so far could return to haunt some party lawmakers next Nov. 3.
For both parties, the stakes are high.
- Kathleen Hunter
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