Such dissonant points of view must be explainable based on cognitive dissonance and preconditioning. However, as for "who is right" I'll certainly place my bets on those people who simply said that the whole thing was a sham and 2/3 wasn't going to come.
'whole thing was a sham' and '2/3 wasn't going to come' are not the same.
It was clear from the beginning that the the chances of getting 2/3 of the Senate was slim to none.
That doesn't make the whole thing a sham though. The democrats shined a light on something Trump did, and forced the Republicans to go on the record with an up or down vote.
Remember back in September when all we had was the transcript? The defense was
'it was a perfect phone call, there was no quid pro quo'.
"If you could show me that Trump actually was engaging in a quid pro quo, outside the phone call, that would be very disturbing"
-Lindsay Graham
So they opened up the inquiry and got a bunch of witnesses that were involved with the Ukes (i'm gonna use 'Ukes' from now on), including several appointed by Trump.
"I know that members of this Committee have frequently framed these complicated issues in the form of a simple question: Was there a 'quid pro quo?' As I testified previously, with regard to the requested White House call and White House meeting, the answer is yes."
-Sondland (Trump campaign donor and appointee)
After a whole bunch of credible witnesses testified that there was definitely a quid pro quo, the defense pivoted to
'oh but it's all hearsay and second hand information'.
So they went to a trial a John Bolton made a statement saying he would no longer fight a subpoena.
“I have concluded that, if the Senate issues a subpoena for my testimony, I am prepared to testify,”
-John Bolton
Perfect, right? We'll finally get to have direct evidence on whether or not Trump has been lying or telling the truth this whole time!
Nope. Now the argument is
'even if he did do it, it's not impeachable'After all this though, something still happened.
Every Senator has been forced to on the record. The historical kind of record.
Also, the country got to look in on wtf is actually going on in the senate.
If anyone is willing, I'm interested in which of these statements you consider true or false. And if you consider 2 or 3 of them true, why do you think they even used any defense other than the last?
'it was a perfect phone call, there was no quid pro quo''it's all hearsay and second hand information' (this implies that direct evidence would be relevant)
'even if he did do it, it's not impeachable'imo, that answer is False, False, False.
I think the democrats forced the republicans to go from True, True, True => False, True, True => False, False, True. Which realllly looks like they don't care about the actual truth and are more concerned about protecting Trump.
They got lindsay graham to go from
"If you could show me that Trump actually was engaging in a quid pro quo, outside the phone call, that would be very disturbing"
-Lindsay Graham
To being the most vocal opponent of having Bolton come testify and explain exactly what happened in a matter of a couple months.
Why?