It wasn't hard to see, when it began, that it would end exactly the way it has. Donald Trump is America's willful arsonist, the man who lit the match under the fabric of our constitutional republic.
The duty of the U.S. House and the Senate is to impeach the president and then remove him from office — and bar him from ever holding office again.
To allow Trump to serve out his term, however brief it may be, puts the nation's safety at risk, leaves our reputation as a democracy in tatters and evades the inescapable truth that the assault on Congress Wednesday was an act of violent sedition aided and abetted by a lawless, immoral and terrifying president.
From the moment Trump became the GOP front-runner in 2015, it was obvious who he was and where, if given the chance, he would take America. He was a malignant narcissist in his person. A fraudster in his businesses. A bully in his relationships. And a demagogue in his politics.
He did not have ideas. He had bigotries.
He did not have a coalition. He had crowds.
He did not have character. He had a quality of confident shamelessness, the kind that offered his followers permission to be shameless, too.
All this was obvious — but was not enough to stop him. America in 2015 had many problems, many of which had gone too long ignored and were ripe for populist exploitation. But by far the biggest problem of that year was that a major political party capitulated to a thug. And the biggest problem of every subsequent year has been that more and more of that party has excused, ignored, forgiven, colluded in and celebrated his thuggery.