One of the Republican’s talking points about impeaching Trump is that it will keep Congress from “doing the business of governing” or the “people’s business.”

Like so much else coming out of the Republican cult, this is pure BS. The thing that’s keeping us from doing the people’s business is Mitch Mc Connell and the Republican Senate.

The fact is, as of July—more than a month before Democrats initiated an impeachment inquiry—the House had passed more than 569 Bills that are stalled in the Republican controlled Senate.

Among these Bills are proposals that enjoy bi-partisan support, and Bills that are popular with the majority of Americans. They include:

If doing the “people’s business” means passing the Bills people want passed, then it should be clear that Senate Republicans have been blocking any attempt at doing that since the last election.

It is a sign of the Democrats inability to message, and the press’s addiction to “both side-ism” that people don’t know the extent to which the Republican Senate has induced legislative paralysis on our system of government. This blockade of doing what’s in the public interest should be a page 1, top-of-the-fold or lead-off story news-at-seven item every time Moscow Mitch kills another Bill, but it’s not.

In fact, Republicans have been doing this for years, now. A look at the record of filibusters and cloture votes shows Republicans have been the Party of no for decades now.

This shouldn’t be surprising. As long as people keep voting for anti-government candidates they will elect people who are not interested in—or even knowledgeable about—governing. And that means things the people want, won’t get done. Tea partiers just want to tear down the system, and that’s become true of the entire Republican Party.

This means that things that need to get done, won’t. It means that power will be relinquished to corporations and the wealthy. It means that government will become as bad as the government hating Republicans tell you it is.

Trump is the logical conclusion of electing anti-government know-nothings to office. His foreign policy is erratic, ad hoc, and dangerous. His economic policy is destructive. His domestic policy is mean, divisive and vindictive.

But as for paralysis? Impeachment has nothing to do with it—the government was at a standstill long before it was officially pursued. It’s not rocket science folks—if we continue to swallow the oligarch’s claims about “government being the problem” and electing people whose main skill is railing against government, we’ll get bad governance.