March 2, 2026

Thank You, Adam Schiff

012720-09-Impeachment-Trump-Schiff
Thank You, Adam Schiff

Thank You, Adam Schiff
In this screenshot taken from a Senate Television webcast, House impeachment manager Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) speaks during impeachment proceedings against U.S. President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol on January 23, 2020 in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Senate Television via Getty Images)

An acquittal is certain, but it won’t be because a lock-solid case wasn’t presented.


Thank You, Adam Schiff

By Michael Winship


On October 16, 1939, Hollywood director Frank Capra premiered Mr. Smith Goes to Washington before an audience of US senators and House members, Supreme Court justices, journalists and assorted other DC dignitaries. It was an all-star event, sponsored by the National Press Club and held at Constitution Hall. Some 4,000 were in attendance.

They hated it.

Today, the movie is celebrated as the story of the earnest everyman Jefferson Smith (played by Jimmy Stewart), who becomes a senator and struggles to fight graft on Capitol Hill.

But that night the senators were having none of it. Many stomped out of the theater, indignant at how theyโ€™d been portrayed in the movieโ€”politicos literally turning their backs on young Jeff Smith as they backed the esteemed colleague at the heart of all the corruption.

Majority Leader Alben Barkley of Kentucky described the picture to a reporter as a โ€œgrotesque distortionโ€ฆ it showed the Senate as the biggest aggregation of nincompoops on record!โ€ Oh my.

Now a classic, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington has long outlived Senator Barkley and his colleagues, a cinematic testament to idealism and the occasional triumph of good in Sodom-on-the-Potomac. And if you look at the Republicans in the Senate today, Barkley doth protest too much. These guys really are the biggest aggregation of nincompoops on record.

What would Barkley and his 1939 colleagues make of this current GOP gang in the so-called โ€œgreatest deliberative body on earth?โ€  Would they be appalled or look the other way? Todayโ€™s senators have sat in their marbled chamber during the impeachment trial ignoring the proof of Donald Trumpโ€™s perfidy, claiming heโ€™s innocent and complaining that no new evidence or witnesses have been produced (even though theyโ€™re the very ones who have helped block admission of additional evidence and witnesses). Theyโ€™ve been yawning, dozing and, honest-to-God, sitting at their desks playing with fidget spinners. I am not making this up.

The one bright light in all this has been the professionalism of the seven House impeachment managers, led by House intelligence committee chair Adam Schiff, Democrat of California. Calmly laying out the case for impeachment with logic and skill, Rep. Schiff has been resolute in the face of threats and ad hominem attacks from Trump and his Republican menials. In so doing, he has, in the words of conservative Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin, โ€œsucceeded in lifting the hearts of his fellow Americans, stripping away the lies and vulgarity and corruption of this president and challenging us to be worthy of our democracy.โ€

Schiff has done all this against counterarguments from the presidentโ€™s team of lawyers that amount to the classic โ€œif you canโ€™t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshitโ€ defense. Heโ€™s in a situation not unlike that faced by โ€œTo Kill a Mockingbirdโ€™sโ€ Atticus Finch: presenting an airtight case even though he knows the jury is dead set against him and already has made up its mind. But the fictional Finch was trying to prove a manโ€™s innocence, Schiff a presidentโ€™s guilt.

He told senators, โ€œNo one is really making the argument, โ€˜Donald Trump would never do such a thing,โ€™ because of course we know that he would, and of course we know that he did. Heโ€™ll do it now. Heโ€™s done it before. Heโ€™ll do it for the next several months. Heโ€™ll do it in the election if heโ€™s allowed to.โ€

And as he closed Friday night,  Schiff said, โ€œSometimes I think about how unforgiving history can be of our conduct. We can do a lifetime’s work, draft the most wonderful legislation, help our constituents, and yet we may be remembered for none of that. But for a single decision we may be remembered, affecting the course of our country. I believe this may be one of those moments. A moment we never thought we would see. A moment when our democracy was gravely threatened, and not from without but from within.โ€

Confronted with such eloquence, Trump and Republicans have reacted with fear and cowardice. When Schiff referenced a CBS News report that GOP senators had been told by the White House, โ€œvote against the president and your head will be on a pike,โ€ they erupted in a phony show of outrage just as blustering and hysterical as Senator Barkleyโ€™s back in 1939.

Some senators are using the โ€œhead on a pikeโ€ remark as a bogus excuse for voting once more against any new witnesses, should such a new motion even make it to the floorโ€”claiming that Schiffโ€™s remark had โ€œlostโ€ them, even though the story did not even originate with him. Perhaps the revelations reportedly in former national security advisor John Boltonโ€™s new bookโ€”he alleges that Trump told him he was indeed freezing aid to Ukraine for personal political gainโ€”will make a difference. But given their record of cult-like devotion to their Dear Leader, itโ€™s doubtful.

So is it any wonder that Senate Republicans are in a collective snit about Schiff, terrified by his equanimity and effectiveness (qualities they lack), desperate to discredit him in any way possible?


Published by Common Dreams, 01.27.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.