If Trump did it, if he colluded with the Russians to interfere with the election, do you want him to get away with it?
Good question, and I'm glad you asked it, but I think that your question is too narrow. Mine would have been, "If Trump is guilty of a crime, do you want him to get away with it?" You likely still won't get a straight answer to that question, either.
Trump fans don't want Trump to be found guilty of crimes, nor to be punished for any he may have committed, so they will resist discussing the possibility. That's been my experience.
Here's a recent group email interchange I had on this matter recently that I think typifies how I believe that most Trump supporters would deal with such questions. We were discussing impeachment rather than justice following a criminal trial, but the phenomenon is the same:
Jack: You may be correct [about Trump having committed impeachable offenses]. We will have to see what transpires in the future. Perhaps you will get your wish if the Democrats win both the house and Senate in the next election.
Me: What is your wish if it turns out that Trump is guilty of impeachable offenses?
Jack: So be it.
(Notice that Jack has deflected from the question asked)
Me: No answer, then, Jack? You aren't willing to say that you would want Trump impeached if he committed one of more impeachable offenses? Let's try a different approach. Suppose a man were guilty of murder, Would you want that man indicted for murder?
Jack: If he [another participant in this email discussion] is suggesting that lying is an impeachable offense as far as Trump is concerned, that will depend to whom he lied and about what he lied. For example in my opinion when Trump lied about how many people attended his inauguration, he did not commit an impeachable offense.
(Another deflection. He still won't answer the question asked, Jack)
Me: That's fine if you prefer to not answer, Jack. Consider the question retracted. I'm sorry if I made you feel uncomfortable.
Jack: I did answer the question
(Jack declines the offer to drop it. I had made my point, and perhaps Jack recognized that. He's an attorney, and probably had a sense of what we, the jury judging him, had seen and would likely conclude.)
Me: You still have not said that you would want Trump impeached for impeachable offenses if he is guilty of them.
No problem. Given how many times you've evaded the question and how many chanced to answer it you've not taken, it seems that you just don't want to say that. It seems like it should be a pretty easy thing to say if that's how you feel.
I'm pretty sure that if I had asked only the part about whether you would want a murderer to be indicted for murder as a separate question unrelated to a discussion of Trump, you would have answered clearly, directly, and in the affirmative the first time you were asked.
Am I incorrect about that? Or would you have said, "So be it" and expected others to understand what that that meant? Or that you would expect the murderer to be indicted, the answer to a question not asked, rather than that you would want him to be indicted (or not)?
You're treating this matter like a hot potato. You're deflecting from the question rather than answering it.
And now you're suggesting that lying is the impeachable offense. Lying that constitutes obstruction of justice is just one of many charges. Lying in general is not. If it were, the articles of impeachment would serve as a summary of the Trump presidency. He's been clocked at over 5 lies a day on average:
Jack: I am not sure you read my answer below. I am not trying to evade the question. I believe I answered it. My comment about lying was with regards Bill Douglass ‘remark about lying immediately before your Response.
I will repeat my answer: “I didn’t say that I didn’t want Trump Impeached if he has committed an impeachable offense. I meant by “So be It” that I would expect him to be impeached if he has committed an impeachable offense just as I would expect a person who has committed a murder to be convicted of that murder.”
What more can I say to convince you and others that I am not trying to evade an answer to your question?
Perhaps you mean that I should say: “I want Trump to be impeached if he has committed an impeachable offense.”
“So be it” means “let it happen” as far as I understand the phrase.
Me: OK, Jack. Yes, I read your answer. And as I already indicated, I disagree with you when you say that you answered my question. I still don't know if you would want Trump impeached if he has committed impeachable offenses. Yes, no, or I don't have an opinion would answer the question.
What you said was "So be it," then said that that meant "Let it happen." You are probably referring to that as an answer. It doesn't answer my question, "What is your wish if it turns out that Trump is guilty of impeachable offenses?" after telling me that I might get my wish if the Democrats retake the House.
I thought that that should be the wish of all Americans who put country and the rule of law ahead of party or persons.
You might or might not wish for that outcome under those circumstances. You seem reluctantly resigned to the possibility of impeachment, but not necessarily supportive of it if appropriate. Perhaps impeachment is never appropriate to you.
Jack: Let’s not beat it to death. Like any good cross examiner, you demand a one word answer."Yes"
(Jack has finally choked up the an answer, which seems like it was painful for him. And he called my line of questioning beating the matter to death)
Me: Thank you for your answer, Jack. Now I know. Now I know that it is also your wish that if Trump is guilty of impeachable offenses, that he be impeached for them.
(
This is a fascinating phenomenon. People are being asked to choose between their tribe and justice, an esteemed principle in Western culture. It seems to me that the tribe prevails, but answerers know that they cannot simply come out and say that they don't care if Trump gets justice if he is guilty, nor can they say that they don't care if he is guilty)