To the Editor,
The recent letter responding to mine spends considerable time questioning my motives while largely avoiding the substance of what I wrote. My point was never about partisan advantage. It was about respect for constitutional institutions, adherence to facts, and maintaining a civil public discourse regardless of which political party holds power.
The claim that President Trump’s first impeachment lacked a legitimate process is contradicted by the historical record. The House of Representatives conducted hearings, collected testimony from numerous witnesses, reviewed documentary evidence, debated the articles of impeachment, and ultimately voted to impeach. Whether one agrees with that decision is a matter of opinion, but the constitutional process itself was followed. Likewise, the Senate exercised its constitutional responsibility by holding a trial and acquitting the president. That is precisely how the Constitution is designed to function.
The suggestion that future congressional majorities might “reverse” presidential impeachments also misunderstands the Constitution. An impeachment is a formal action of the House of Representatives that becomes part of the historical record. A later Congress may express disagreement through resolutions, but it cannot erase or undo an impeachment that has already occurred.
My correspondent also asks why I have not written letters criticizing Democrats, President Biden, or proposals such as statehood for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico or changes to the Electoral College. The answer is straightforward: this letter was about the conduct of political leaders and the importance of constitutional norms, not a catalog of every issue or disagreement in American politics. Citizens are free to write about the issues they believe merit public discussion without first satisfying a partisan checklist.
I have never argued that one political party possesses a monopoly on good judgment or civility. Public officials of every party deserve criticism when they disregard democratic principles and recognition when they uphold them. The standard should remain consistent regardless of whose name appears beside the office.
Our community benefits most when disagreements are grounded in verifiable facts rather than speculation, personal attacks, or assumptions about one another’s motives. Healthy debate depends on honest engagement with evidence and a willingness to disagree without questioning another person’s character.
Reasonable people will continue to differ on public policy. That is not a weakness of democracy—it is one of its defining strengths. What should unite us is a shared commitment to the Constitution, respect for our institutions, and a political conversation that values facts over rhetoric.
Chuck Tarleton
Mathias, WV





