ever from the president's own party to vote to convict, so obviously there's a political dimension sheree are only three senators left in the republican caucus who states he didn't win both times. it's a reflection of the extent to which the party has retreated into trump country under his presidency. i do think it's a little larger than that. if you look at this in a slightly larger context of all of the republicans who supported his efforts to subvert the election, two-thirds of the state attorneys general, two-thirds of the house republicans signing on to that lawsuit, if you look at house republicans just now basically allowing marjorie taylor greene under the tent, refusing to excommunicate her, and now again after this, it's hard to imagine a more egregious breach of the oath of office as liz cheney said, and they're all going to exonerate him again. i ask the question has the extremist conspiracy wing in the republican party become too big for the party to directly confront and to try to excommunicate? that seems to me the message that they are sending from these serial decisions