- United States
- Texas
- Letter
I am writing as a deeply alarmed and outraged constituent in response to President Trump’s recent address at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
What I read was not a serious policy speech, nor the conduct of a leader acting in good faith on behalf of the United States. It was a rambling, incoherent tirade filled with demonstrably false claims, open contempt for our allies, threats against sovereign nations, attacks on democratic institutions, and repeated praise of authoritarian behavior. It reflected neither factual reality nor the basic dignity of the office he holds.
Even more disturbing was the pattern that has now become unmistakable: reckless misinformation about the economy, NATO, elections, immigration, and foreign policy; explicit hostility toward the free press; and an apparent inability—or unwillingness—to distinguish truth from personal grievance. This is not simply a matter of political disagreement. It is a matter of fitness for office.
The presidency is not a platform for personal vendettas, delusions of grandeur, or threats against democratic norms. The statements made in this address would have consequences far beyond embarrassment: they undermine U.S. credibility abroad, destabilize alliances, inflame division at home, and weaken the rule of law.
I am demanding that you treat this situation with the seriousness it requires. Congress has both the authority and the obligation to act when a president abuses power, spreads disinformation, and demonstrates conduct incompatible with constitutional governance. At this point, impeachment is not “partisan escalation”—it is a necessary safeguard.
History will remember who chose convenience and silence, and who chose accountability.
I expect you, as my representative, to publicly support investigations and impeachment proceedings and to state clearly that this behavior is unacceptable and disqualifying.
Enough is enough. This is long past the point of normal politics.