In addition to prompting speculation about his own political ambitions, Steyer’s impeachment campaign has played a part in revealing the tremendous and growing grassroots opposition to the president that has been reflected in both opinion polls and repudiations of Trump at the ballot box.

According to an Associated Press/NORC poll released this month, Trump—who has labeled Steyer “wacky” and “totally unhinged”—is the most unpopular first-year president in history. Another recent poll (pdf)—conducted by the Wall Street Journal and NBC News—found that 41 percent of Americans want Congress to hold impeachment hearings for Trump. By contrast, only 36 percent of Americans say they would vote for Trump in 2020.

While some have warned that any focus on impeaching Trump—an objective that, at least for now, runs up against insurmountable political obstacles—is a distraction from more immediate and substantial issues, 58 Democrats nonetheless voted to move ahead with debate on Rep. Al Green’s (D-Texas) articles of impeachment earlier this month.

“If some individual Democrats feel politically constrained from talking too directly about Trump’s fitness to serve, that’s understandable. But generally speaking, this moment is potentially too consequential for the party to retreat into squeamish message-tailoring,” argued the Washington Post‘s Greg Sargent. “Tom Steyer’s ads calling for impeachment have been derided as a big waste of money. But someone has to be staking out the outer boundaries of this conversation.”

“Whatever is going to happen,” Sargent concluded, “Democrats should rise to the occasion and treat it with the gravity and ambition it commands.”

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