Secondly, nor have you actually demonstrated he is wrong and there was no evidence better than circumstantial.
Ah, the classic "prove something doesn't exist". He was wrong and he had no evidence better than circumstantial.
There are strict and proper processes to determine whether someone has broken the law. Or have you forgotten the principle "innocent until proven guilty"?
That's a legal standard, not an analytical method. I don't think Clinton should be in jail without proving it in court, or even should be if her crimes were proven in court with how slight they were, but that's not the same as denying they exist.
This is a very bizarre argument. Any party that contests elections in a representative democracy is "democratic". Both the Republicans and Democrats in the US are small-r republican (because they intend to form a presidential government) and democratic (because they intend to form a government which offers elections).
Both parties also attempt to some degree to represent the wishes and priorities of their constituents, and both parties also attempt to some degree to hold an overarching party-political philosophy. Both parties have evolved and mutated rather than existing representing a "fixed" position; and both parties have shifted to cater to the changing priorities of their constituents.
There is no fundamental difference between how the two parties operate which would indicate that one holds fixed principles and the other doesn't. You seem to have concluded that from... the name of one of the parties, and that's it.
It's the name of both parties. The Democratic Party, loyal to the general ideas of democratic governance, and the Republican Party, loyal to the specific formation and purpose of existing American Republic. The two parties aren't nonsense names like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. The Republican Party was named as such to say that the party carried the values on which the Republic was founded, believing them to be timeless, necessary, and lost in the second-party system. The name Republican was intended to say to people "we maintain the beliefs that founded the nation and formed this republic".
And that rhetoric persists to this day. I'm sure you won't disagree that Republicans are constantly on about constitutional law and foundational principles. Even the times in history when the Republican Party was the major force for change, it was always justified as a better expression of the intended ideals of the founding fathers. I do not in any way fault you if you think that rhetoric is a bunch of bullcrap, but I hope you can see my description of the party is accurate.
Since I understand my lack of credibility here in describing the Democratic Party, I will defer to a Democrat, from the book "A Democrat Looks at His Party".
From the very beginning the Democratic Party has been broadly based… the party of the many… the urban worker; the backwoods merchant and banker; the small farmer… The many have an important and most relevant characteristic. They have many interests, many points of view, many purposes to accomplish, and a party which represents them will have their many interests, many points of view, and many purposes also. It is this multiplicity of interests which, I submit, is the principal clue in understanding the vitality and endurance of the Democratic Party.
You can see here not only my description of the Democratic Party as the party broadly based on representing the majority of people, you can also see a lot of the discussion that still happens on this forum. Plenty of times here it has come up that the Republicans get to be a monolith while Democrats fight among themselves because they represent a broad range of views. That book was published in 1955, by the then previous Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, and yet his descriptions of the Democratic Party remain so accurate and relevant as to be echoed in discussion 65 years later by people who've no idea he ever wrote them. Policy positions have changed greatly, multiple times, and largely for the better in the period since this was written, but none of those policy positions were ever the basis of the Democratic Party. The basis of the party, that exists across generations, is that the Democratic Party is "the party of the many". He goes on to say:
The Democratic Party is not an ideological party…. It represents too many interests to be neatly labeled or to be imprisoned
That's not my words. That is not even a criticism. It's an honest assessment from a former Democratic Secretary of State. I'll take his assessment of his own party. I'm not interested in his assessment of Republicans, who he characterizes as the party that represents the focused interests of the economically powerful, but he's a Democrat so that's what he would say. And despite his misunderstanding of Republicanism, he still nearly finds the truth I'm trying to express:
The base of all three opponents [Federalist, Whig, and Republican] has been the interest of the economically powerful, of those who manage affairs... This business base of the Republican Party is stressed not in any spirit of criticism. The importance of business is an outstanding fact of American life. It is stressed because here lies the significant difference between the parties, the single-interest party against the many-interest party, rather than in a supposed division of attitudes… conservative against liberal.
The difference in the parties to him is not conservative against liberal, it is single-interest against many interest, which is almost true. The bigger split, that he doesn't see and causes him to misunderstand the Republican Party, is that the two parties can't even be made parallel like that, they exist in different paradigms entirely. The Democratic Party is the party of the many, basing its legitimacy on the popular majority. The Republican Party is the party of principle, basing its legitimacy on the ideals on which the republic was formed. You can fairly say that Republicans don't represent the majority, and also fairly say that Democrats have no fixed principles, and neither is really a criticism because neither of those statements targets the parties' individual claims to legitimacy. The different perspectives are why you can have Democrats and Republicans agree on a lot of policies but still talk right past each other because of the very different views on the basis of governance that people often don't even realize they have.