This editorial in the Los Angeles Times is part 3 of a four-part series about the new president.
Standing before the cheering throngs at the Republican National Convention last summer, Donald Trump bemoaned how special interests had rigged the country’s politics and its economy, leaving Americans victimized by unfair trade deals, incompetent bureaucrats and spineless leaders.
He swooped into politics, he declared, to subvert the powerful and rescue those who cannot defend themselves. “Nobody knows the system better than me, which is why I alone can fix it.”
To Trump’s faithful, those words were a rallying cry. But his critics heard something far more menacing in them: a dangerously authoritarian vision of the presidency — one that would crop up time and again as he talked about overruling generals, disregarding international law, ordering soldiers to commit war crimes, jailing his opponent.
Trump has no experience in politics; he’s never previously run for office or held a government position. So perhaps he was unaware that one of the hallmarks of the American system of government is that the president’s power to “fix” things unilaterally is constrained by an array of strong institutions — including the courts, the media, the permanent federal bureaucracy and Congress. Combined, they provide an essential defense against an imperial presidency.
Yet in his first weeks at the White House, President Trump has already sought to undermine many of those institutions. Those that have displayed the temerity to throw some hurdle in the way of a Trump objective have quickly felt the heat.
Consider Trump’s feud with the courts.
He has repeatedly questioned the impartiality and the motives of judges. For example, he attacked the jurists who ruled against his order excluding travelers from seven majority Muslim nations, calling one a “so-called judge” and later tweeting:
Just cannot believe a judge would put our country in such peril. If something happens blame him and court system. People pouring in. Bad!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 5, 2017
It’s nothing new for presidents to disagree with court decisions. But Trump’s direct, personal attacks on judges’ integrity and on the legitimacy of the judicial system itself — and his irresponsible suggestion that the judiciary should be blamed for future terrorist attacks — go farther. They aim to undermine public faith in the third branch of government.
The courts are the last line of defense for the Constitution and the rule of law; that’s what makes them such a powerful buffer against an authoritarian leader. The president of the United States should understand that and respect it.
Other institutions under attack include:
1. The electoral process. Faced with certified election results showing that Hillary Clinton outpolled him by nearly 3 million votes, Trump repeated the unsubstantiated — and likely crackpot — assertion that Clinton’s supporters had duped local polling places with millions of fraudulent votes. In a democracy, the right to vote is the one check that the people themselves hold against their leaders; sowing distrust in elections is the kind of thing leaders do when they don’t want their power checked.
2. The intelligence community. After reports emerged that the Central Intelligence Agency believed Russia had tried to help Trump win, the president-elect’s transition team responded: “These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.” It was a snarky, dismissive, undermining response — and the administration has continued to belittle the intelligence community and question its motives since then, while also leaking stories about possibly paring and restructuring its ranks. It is bizarre to watch Trump continue to tussle publicly with this particular part of the government, whose leaders he himself has appointed, as if he were still an outsider candidate raging against the machine. It’s unnerving too, given the intelligence services’ crucial role in protecting the country against hidden risks, assisting the U.S. military and helping inform Trump’s decisions.
3. The media. Trump has blistered the mainstream media for reporting that has cast him in a poor light, saying outlets concocted narratives based on nonexistent anonymous sources. In February he said that the “fake news” media will “never represent the people,” adding ominously: “And we’re going to do something about it.” His goal seems to be to defang the media watchdog by making the public doubt any coverage that accuses Trump of blundering or abusing his power.
4. Federal agencies. In addition to calling for agency budgets to be chopped by up to 30%, Trump appointed a string of Cabinet secretaries who were hostile to much of their agencies’ missions and the laws they’re responsible for enforcing. He has also proposed deep cuts in federal research programs, particularly in those related to climate change. It’s easier to argue that climate change isn’t real when you’re no longer collecting the data that documents it.
In a way, Trump represents a culmination of trends that have been years in the making.
Conservative talk radio hosts have long blasted federal judges as “activists” and regulators as meddlers in the economy, while advancing the myth of rampant election fraud. And gridlock in Washington has led previous presidents to try new ways to circumvent the checks on their power — witness President George W. Bush’s use of signing statements to invalidate parts of bills Congress passed, and President Obama’s aggressive use of executive orders when lawmakers balked at his proposals.
What’s uniquely threatening about Trump’s approach, though, is how many fronts he’s opened in this struggle for power and the vehemence with which he seeks to undermine the institutions that don’t go along.
It’s one thing to complain about a judicial decision or to argue for less regulation, but to the extent that Trump weakens public trust in essential institutions like the courts and the media, he undermines faith in democracy and in the system and processes that make it work.
He sees himself as not merely a force for change, but as a wrecking ball.
Trump betrays no sense for the president’s place among the myriad of institutions in the continuum of governance. He seems willing to violate long-established political norms without a second thought, and he cavalierly rejects the civility and deference that allow the system to run smoothly. He sees himself as not merely a force for change, but as a wrecking ball.
Will Congress act as a check on Trump’s worst impulses as he moves forward? One test is the House and Senate intelligence committees’ investigation into Russia’s meddling in the presidential election; lawmakers need to muster the courage to follow the trail wherever it leads. Can the courts stand up to Trump? Already, several federal judges have issued rulings against the president’s travel ban. And although Trump has railed against the decisions, he has obeyed them.
None of these institutions are eager to cede authority to the White House and they won’t do so without a fight. It would be unrealistic to suggest that America’s most basic democratic institutions are in imminent jeopardy.
But we should not view them as invulnerable either. Remember that Trump’s verbal assaults are directed at the public, and are designed to chip away at people’s confidence in these institutions and deprive them of their validity. When a dispute arises, whose actions are you going to consider legitimate? Whom are you going to trust? That’s why the public has to be wary of Trump’s attacks on the courts, the “deep state,” the “swamp.” We can’t afford to be talked into losing our faith in the forces that protect us from an imperial presidency.
If the polls that measure the malignant narcissist’s popularity are even close, then almost two-thirds of the public already does not respect or trust Trump. If the Congress and courts cave to the one-third that still supports the ignorant tyrant in the White House, that will probably lead to a violent and bloody revolution once the majority’s anger boils over.
Maybe, or the public’s displeasure could be displayed in midterms by replacing all those legislators who continue to support this want to be President. His people have to be accountable if they assist him in defacing our government to maintain control at any cost.
Watch the special election in Georgia to fill Tom Price’s seat, now that he is in Trump’s cabinet. It is the same seat once held by Newt Gingrich, in suburban Atlanta. Democrats have gathered to support Jon Ossoff, who is running in an open field with many candidates. If he gets 50% of the vote, there will be no run-off. His race is getting a lot of national attention and enormous grassroots support from local volunteers.
The malignant narcissist in the White House does not run for re-election in 2018. But some GOP members in both Houses of Congress do and so do many in state legislatures. I don’t know how many governors will be up for re-election.
There is no national election. In 2018, all elections are local and state elections.
Members of Congress will be running in their districts and states. Members of state legislatures run in their state districts.
With Trump dropping in popularity in the polls, many of these Republicans up for reelection will start to distance themselves from Trump and disconnect from him and focus on winning over the voters in their states/districts to get re-elected. They don’t care about the rest of America outside their small area of influence. They only care for the voters that vote in their district and/or state.
Some Republicans have already started to back away from Trump explaining why Trumpcare failed in its first attempt to replace Obamacare.
And if Trump’s budget doesn’t pass and Congress makes drastic changes before sending the budget back for his signature, this will be another sign that GOP members in Congress are distancing themselves from this tyrannical troll.
If Trump vetoes the budget Congress sends back to him, then some Republicans will join with Democrats in an attempt to override that veto. The more unpopular Trump becomes, the more Republicans, that do not belong to that so-called freedom caucus that wants to enslave the rest of the nation to their agenda, will be willing to create alliances with Democrats.
There’s small victory today. Bannon has been removed from the National Security Council.http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/steve-bannon-removed-national-security-council-n742926?cid=sm_npd_nn_fb_ma
Yes!
Probably the professionals couldn’t stand him.
The Hill reports this afternoon that although Osoff seems to be doing very well in Georgia, the Montana special election is being ignored by the Dems. Wake up Montana Dems and get out the vote!!!
Also worth watching the Rose Garden Press Conference this AM and listening to King Abdullah of Jordan, and the Malignant One. Very different body language by Drumpf than with Angela Merkel. Polite deference, rather than rude ignoring. Interesting talks by each, and even more interesting questions from reporters.
Ellen,
Trump doesn’t treat women as equals. That’s why he was so uncomfortable with Merkel, refused to shake her hand.
She has a doctorate in physics. She is way smarter than he is.
Bed bugs seem way smarter than he is…
From newyorker.com: Welcome to Jared Kushner’s World
…It can’t come as a shock, at this point, that anyone in the Trump Administration thought it was a good idea to send a neophyte to a war zone, or to bypass normal diplomatic procedures, or to turn a fight in which American troops are at risk and Iraqi civilians are being killed by errant air strikes into a venue for familial posturing….
Indeed, the only real puzzle of the Kushner trip is which particular Trumpian political vice it best illustrates: deluded self-aggrandizement or a callous indifference to other people’s lives; conflicts of interest or a lack of any interest in the consequences of the use of power…
Is the question whether Trump really thinks that Kushner has the competence and the ability to manage the portfolio he has dreamed up for him—bringing peace to the Middle East; monitoring the fight against isis; overhauling the federal government; serving as an intermediary with China, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, and even Canada—or whether he even thinks that competence matters?…
http://www.newyorker.com/news/amy-davidson/welcome-to-jared-kushners-world
In the eyes of Agent Orange, is Kushner is married to his daughter, and if he’s rich, and if he has gamed the system – and it’s affirmative for all three – then he must be ‘smart’ and ‘competent.’ In fact, he must be ‘brilliant.’
Not.
Are our schools instilling a hatred of authoritarianism? I suspect not.
I realize we’re dealing with semantics, but my hope is that they get a balanced education and learn about civic virtue and engagement. The rest will follow.
Back in 1982, my public high school required a half-year course on the Soviet Union in 9th grade. Ergo I have a distinct notion of what it would be like to live in an unfree society. Don’t you think that the best way to instill appreciation for freedom is to take the time to clearly and vividly depict an unfree society?
Bannon may be gone but….. “He keeps his security clearance, according to the senior White House official.” If you want to see an underpublicized person who functioned as a major speech writer fror Trump, follow the early life and rise of Steve Miller as a darling of hard right conservatives. Miller had the talent to make Bannon’s “economic nationalism” (America First) into a variety of cultural nationalism with the white male working stiff who saluted the flag and did not care about politcal correctness a hero. Steve Miller honed Trump’s demeaning rhetoric, but did not eliminate it. You can find transcripts of Trump’s speeches, executive orders and the rest at whitehouse.gov.
And also follow the vita of Bannon’s WH leaker to Nunes…Cohen-something hyphenated. Came out late last night that his wife does PR for Putin (much as Flynn has been doing).
And this just came from Daily Kos….
“Hohhh boy, Ellen . This is not the kind of thing you do when you’re feeling good about your political fortunes.
Paul Ryan’s Congressional Leadership Fund is trying to tie Ossoff to Osama bin Laden in its newest web ad. Just get a load of this horseshit:
NARRATOR: Al Jazeera—a media outlet that has been described as a “mouthpiece for terrorists”—has been paying Jon Ossoff thousands of dollars. But Jon refuses to tell voters exactly how much money he’s received. Just like Jon refuses to tell voters the truth about his experience. What is he hiding? How can we trust him?
And whose ugly mug shows up at the three-second mark? The terrorist mastermind who, oh yeah, was brought to justice by Democratic President Barack Obama.
This is of course garbage through and through: Ossoff runs a company that makes documentaries investigating crime and corruption for a broad array of news organizations. Oh, and Osama bin Laden is still dead. Thanks, Obama.
But this kind of fearmongering is exactly what we’ve come to expect from soulless Republicans. In fact, this spot is incredibly similar to another infamous GOP ad used to smear a different Georgia Democrat, former Sen. Max Cleland—a triple amputee and Vietnam War hero—by linking him with images of bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. Thanks to that ad, Cleland lost a tough bid for re-election, so it’s only natural Republicans are returning to the same skullduggery that served them so well in the Peach State.”
So…Vote for Ossoff in Georgia.
The LA Times editorial series on Trump is masterful. And scary.
It forces the question, How exactly did this happen?
There are multiple, intertwined, answers. But it’s clear that fake news. both that from Fox and the stuff generated and disseminated by Russian intelligence agencies and by alt-right media, played a major part.
It’s also clear that Agent Orange ran an overtly racist, xenophobic, and misogynistic campaign…and garnered support…and won. Think about that. A loudmouthed serial liar who has systematically gamed the system and dumped on working class citizens ‘won’ the election posing as a ‘populist.’ And did it with Russian help. And his ‘supporters’ have yet to show they really care. As one old boy smoking ciggies and selling firewood out of the back of his pickup truck in Louisiana put it, “If that’s what it took, I’m glad they did it.”
The mainstream media an bear some of the blame for reporting much of the fake news articles. Many citizens can be blamed for buying it. Those who tune in to Fox can be faulted for their desire to be misinformed.
Clearly there is a serious problem if the citizens in a democratic republic are against the core values that are the foundation of their nation.
What’s to be done? Obviously, education. Lots of it. And public schools have a critical role to play. If only……
Yes, Fox misinforms people. It figures that the Orange Buffoon wouldn’t see anything wrong in sexual misconduct. Gad, he even has the gall to support O’Reilly who is an offender. Agent Orange lacks basic human decency. How far has this country fallen to elect someone like this to the highest office in the land?
………….
At least 40 advertisers have pulled their ads from his [O’Reilly] show. But President Trump defended the Fox News host, saying “I don’t think Bill did anything wrong.” [HuffPost]
How is Agent Orange going to have a trillion dollar infrastructure bill, build the Great Wall of Mexico, increase military spending and have a tax cut, especially for the wealthy? I have no knowledge of economics but this sounds utterly ridiculous.
NYT:
[Trump] Described his $1 trillion infrastructure bill as a high-value legislative sweetener that he could attach to a revived Affordable Care Act repeal bill or tax code overhaul to attract bipartisan support.
It is frightening enough that this creepy con man, a proudly money-driven ignoramus, could, with the help of Putin, win the Presidency….but more disheartening is that so many American voters from miners to billionaires, joined to put him in office. These are the ones who are our neighbors,if no longer our friends. They work with us and surround us NO LONGER in silence…and they show no compunctions to being openly bigoted and rolling in greed. They emulate the “good Germans’ who cheered when their Jewish neighbors were herded onto the cattle car trains to be taken to the gas chambers.
Assad is doing this gassing of his people now. Trump might do it next.
Different polls say different things. I like this poll. Hope the Orange Buffoon’s popularity continues to go down. (I believe Fox is still propping him up.)
………..
National Embarrassment: A Majority of Americans Don’t Like Having Donald Trump as President, and His Wall Isn’t Helping Him @alternet
A majority of voters in the U.S. are embarrassed to have Donald Trump as their president, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll released on Tuesday. Fifty-two percent of the voters polled said they were embarrassed that Trump is leading the nation, while only 27 percent stated they were proud. Trump also appears to be losing popularity within key factions of his voter base — men and white people. Fifty-one percent of the white male voters surveyed and 48 percent of all white voters polled said they disapprove of the way Trump is handling his new job. In total, only 35 percent of those surveyed said they approve of Trump’s handling of the presidency, while 57 percent said they disapprove….
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/majority-americans-dont-having-donald-trump-president#.WOY2pELCvO8.gmail