Now Raskin is serving on the House select committee charged with investigating the Jan. Trump's second impeachment trial ended in acquittal in February 2021. "And so my feeling to the people who want to take down our democracy is that they're not going to scare me out of doing my job." "I personally felt no fear, because the very worst thing that ever could have happened to me had already happened to me," he says. Raskin knew that leading the impeachment trial would likely result in death threats, but he pushed on. I personally felt no fear because the very worst thing that ever could have happened to me had already happened to me. "I was forced to galvanize all of my love for Tommy and my daughters, Hannah and Tabitha, and my wife, Sarah, and our family and our country, and to throw myself into the trial to make the case that Donald Trump had incited this violent insurrection in an effort to overthrow the 2020 presidential election," Raskin says. Looking back now, Raskin sees Pelosi's request as a lifeline. Then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., asked him to serve as the lead manager in the second impeachment trial of President Donald Trump. There was a time, he says, when "I wasn't sure whether I was ever going to be able to do anything again." In his new memoir, Unthinkable, Raskin reflects on his continuing efforts to understand those two traumatic events. Capitol with his daughter and son-in-law when a violent mob stormed the building in an attempt to overturn the results of the presidential election. 6, 2021, just a day after Tommy's funeral, Raskin was at work in the U.S. On New Year's Eve 2020, his son Tommy, 25, died by suicide after years of fighting mental illness. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., experienced two unimaginable traumas in the span of a single week.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |