Heather Cox Richardson relies on her experience and knowledge of history to debunk the demented ideas of the quacks and madmen planning for Trump’s next term in office. They believe that every change in the U.S. Constitution was part of a left wing plot, rather than a natural evolution to adapt to societal change. Please open the link to read her analysis in full.
She writes:
Yesterday the Washington Post published an article by Beth Reinhard examining the philosophy and the power of Russell Vought, the hard-right Christian nationalist who is drafting plans for a second Trump term. Vought was the director of the Office of Management and Budget from July 2020 to January 2021 during the Trump administration. In January 2021 he founded the Center for Renewing America, a pro-Trump think tank, and he was a key player in the construction of Project 2025, the plan to gut the nonpartisan federal government and replace it with a dominant president and a team of loyalists who will impose religious rule on the United States.
When Republicans took control of the House of Representatives in 2023, Vought advised the far right, calling for draconian cuts to government agencies, student loans, and housing, health care, and food assistance. He called for $2 trillion in cuts to Medicaid over ten years, more than $600 billion in cuts to the Affordable Care Act, more than $400 billion in cuts to food assistance, and so on.
Last month the Republican National Committee (RNC), now dominated by Trump loyalists, named Vought policy director of the RNC platform committee, the group that will draft a political platform for the Republicans this year. In 2020 the Republican Party did not write a platform, simply saying that it “enthusiastically” supported Trump and his agenda. With Vought at the head of policy, it is reasonable to think that the party’s 2024 platform will skew toward the policies Vought has advanced elsewhere.
Vought argues that the United States is in a “post constitutional moment” that “pays only lip service to the old Constitution.” He attributes that crisis to “the Left,” which he says “quietly adopted a strategy of institutional change,” by which he appears to mean the growth of the federal government to protect individual Americans. He attributes that change to the presidency of President Woodrow Wilson beginning in 1913. Vought calls for what he calls “Radical Constitutionalism” to destroy the power of the modern administrative state and instead elevate the president to supreme authority.
There are historical problems with this assessment, not least that it attributes to “the Left” a practical and popular change in the U.S. government to adjust it to the modern industrial world, as if somehow that change was a fringe stealth campaign.
While it has been popular among the radical right to bash Democratic president Woodrow Wilson for the 1913 Revenue Act that established the modern income tax, suggesting that it was this moment that began the creation of the modern state, the recasting of government in fact took place under Republican Theodore Roosevelt a decade before Wilson took office, and it was popular without regard to partisanship.
The liberalism on which the United States was founded in the late 1700s came from the notion—radical at the time—that individuals have rights and that the government generally must not intrude on those rights. This idea was central to the thinking of the Founders who wrote the Declaration of Independence, who put into the form of a mathematical constant—“we hold these truths to be self-evident”—the idea that “all men are created equal” and that they have the right to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” as well as the right to live under a government of their own choosing….
Tearing apart the modern state, as those like Vought advocate, would take us back to the world Roosevelt recognized as being antithetical to the rights of individuals promised by the Declaration of Independence.
A key argument for a strong administrative state was that it could break the power of a few men to control the nation. It is no accident that those arguing for a return to a system without a strong administrative state are eager to impose their religion on the American majority, who have rejected their principles and policies. Americans support abortion rights, women’s rights, LBGTQ+ rights, minority rights: the equal rights articulated in the Declaration of Independence.
And therein lies the second historical problem with Vought’s “Radical Constitutionalism.” James Madison, the key thinker behind the Constitution, explained why a democracy cannot be based on religion. As a young man, Madison had watched officials in his home state of Virginia arrest itinerant preachers for attacking the established church in the state. He was no foe of religion, but by 1773 he had begun to question whether established religion, which was common in the colonies, was good for society. By 1776, many of his broad-thinking neighbors had come to believe that society should “tolerate” different religious practices, but he had moved past tolerance to the belief that men had a right of conscience.
In that year, he was instrumental in putting Section 16 into the Virginia Declaration of Rights on which our own Bill of Rights would be based. It reads: “That religion, or the duty which we owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and therefore all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience; and that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance, love, and charity toward each other.”
In 1785, in a “Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessments,” Madison explained that what was at stake was not just religion, but also representative government itself. The establishment of one religion over others attacked a fundamental human right—an unalienable right—of conscience. If lawmakers could destroy the right of freedom of conscience, they could destroy all other unalienable rights. Those in charge of government could throw representative government out the window and make themselves tyrants.
Journalist Reinhard points out that Trump strategist Steve Bannon recently praised Vought and his colleagues as “madmen” who are going to destroy the U.S. government. “We’re going to rip and shred the federal government apart, and if you don’t like it, you can lump it,” Bannon said.
In July 2022 a jury found Bannon guilty of contempt of Congress for his defiance of a subpoena from the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, and that October, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, sentenced him to four months in prison. Bannon fought the conviction, but in May 2024 a federal appeals court upheld it.
On June 6, Judge Nichols ordered him to report to prison by July 1.

James Madison was the best of the Framers.
There would be no country like the U.S. without him.
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Nationalist Christian = Nat-C
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“Tearing apart the modern state, as those like Vought advocate, would take us back to the world Roosevelt recognized as being antithetical to the rights of individuals promised by the Declaration of Independence. “
I disagree. What it would do is to throw the country into a horrible mess. The result would look nothing like America at the turn of the twentieth century. Rather it would be a rural disaster coupled with an urban nightmare. It would be a post-apocalyptic nightmare.
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The good news is that, as reported today, Congressional Democrats have organized a Stop Project 2025 Task Force in order to defend democracy from the far right radical todies behind tRump:
https://huffman.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/congressional-leaders-form-task-force-to-counter-project-2025-and-defend-democracy
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Insightful article, also published today: “The Biggest Lie Trump–Biden 2024 Rematch Voters Are Telling Themselves” because “The system will not inevitably “hold.””
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/06/biggest-lie-trump-biden-2024-voters.html
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Trump never had any interest in actually governing. He ran in 2016 because Jeff Sessions, Steve Bannon, and Stephen Miller looked around for someone to carry their racist agenda forward in the presidency and chose Trump and groomed him as a candidate. And Bannon came on to the Trump team with a whole populist agenda involving a huge government work program to fix America’s infrastructure and put millions of blue collar people to work in well-paying jobs in this program. Trump’s inaugural speech, written by Bannon, was all about that program. But Trump HAD NO INTEREST IN THIS. He did not pursue it at all. Has Trump changed? Will he actually have interest in governing in a second term? In putting this guy’s program in place? PROBABLY NOT. What would have to happen is that a bunch of people on a Trump inauguration and staffing team would have to work to put together a Reich-y team to carry out this agenda DESPITE TRUMP, who has the attention span of a gerbil on methamphetamine and the intelligence of a pet rock.
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Bannon’s plan was, via this massive WPA-type program, to make Trump in a Reich-wing working-class hero. But despite the Inauguration speech, Trump had and has ZERO interest in working-class people, so that’ wasn’t going to happen, especially since the Repugnican Party (and to a lesser extent, the Dimocratic Party as well) exists to service wealthy donors to their campaigns and isn’t about to let ordinary people into its country clubs, where they privately joke about the unwashed, ignorant Trumpanzees whom they can lead around with nose rings despite DOING NOTHING FOR THEM AND, IN FACT, CONSISTENTLY PASSING LEGISLATION THAT HURTS THEM.
So, we have this problem: We live in a country of idiots and predators on the idiots.
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Yes, I’ve always wondered why hardworking people support Trump. He does nothing for them and uses his power to protect the fortunes of the 1%. Do they know? Do they care? Or is he successful at manipulating their sense of grievance? He is a “victim,” just like them.
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You left out Paul Manafort and a guy named Putin, Bob.
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Yes, I did. When it became clear that Trump had taken the bait and was running, those guys swooped in. Putin had been independently cultivating Trump as an asset for a long time. In fact, he inherited the cultivation of Trump as an asset. Trump made his first trip to Moscow ten years before Putin became president, on a KGB plane, at the invitation of the Russian ambassador to the United States. And then there are Trump’s Soviet-block wives. . . .
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BOB: I didn’t know that about Trump’s pre-Putin history. My head is literally swimming. CBK
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https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/11/19/trump-first-moscow-trip-215842/
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In other words, Bannon wanted to fashion Trump into a Reich-wing working-class hero via this massive WPA-type program, but Trump has no interest (he doesn’t give a flying [rhymes with truck] for working-class people), and the rest of the Repugnican Party wasn’t about to get behind something that would benefit people barely above the bottom of the social ladder because it exists to service wealthy donors. Its raison d’être is meretriciousness.
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Bob and Diane: Bannon also wants to destroy the administrative state. I’m confused. How does that meet with support of the working class . . . of individual citizens?
But as the article suggests, Richardson has understood the power of Orwellian doublespeak–applied to writ-large order–e.g., Vought calling the administrative state . . . that is set up to protect individual Tocquevillian citizens from the wealthy and powerful–a quiet encroachment by left wing agenda.
But the worst of it is that they somehow regard their work as Christian. The whole thing is an Orwellian head-banger.
Also, it seems to me, as one of those citizens, that so called “entrepreneurs” (scam artists) are interfacing their businesses in between (a) government services (free for the people) and (b) those citizens/individuals/public that government is supposed to serve. So it’s not just charter schools and a sustained attack on public schools. And they use sleazy but legal methods to suck in someone’s trust, then play your bank account and credit card like a fiddle.
Of note: try to find a public service government website on Google and you have to have a sharp eye to wade through “sponsored sites” that look real. There is even one that slyly sidetracks inquiries to the Better Business Bureau. If you are not careful, you end up on a business-filtered site that leaves out complaints of their own business. When the public trust is gone, civilization goes with it. CBK
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Businesses join the BBB to get the nifty decals that they hand out that reassure (falsely )customers that the businesses actually are somehow more virtuous .than their competitors.
Once they get the decals they rarely renew. And the BBB itself does nothing to police their members.
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jsrtheta: I forgot to mention also that as with Charter schools and the privatization movement, they get money from the government (taxes) at one end, and then from fees and other charges from those they pretend to serve. The whole thing is so sleazy and corrupt.
They climb around the law as if it were their own private jungle gym. CBK
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Remember when many charters collected pandemic funds as public schools, then collected more pandemic funds as private businesses?
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Hello Diane: Yes, the charter/private school idea (no matter what they call it) lost me way-back-when . . . when I was unaware of the pervasiveness of the problem and recognized that they were outraged at the expectation of accountability, which I thought was a GIVEN in any situation where public funding is involved . . . Great big silly me. CBK
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Hi Bob: My point was that what you say doesn’t square with Bannon being pro-middle-class worker before Trump was elected. I don’t doubt he is a grifter and an anarchist, but I guess being pro-worker too gives credence to the “logical illogic” of the grifter and anarchist. CBK
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Why do people ever believe anything Trump or Bannon says?
How can anyone believe Trump after so many lies?
He recently claimed he never said “Lock her up.” Really. He assumes we are all stupid. Or his cult is.
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Again, Bannon advised Trump to run on the issue of putting people back to work rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure. In other words, his sensible plan was for Trump to run as an outsider and populist with the working class foremost in his mind. Trump parroted Bannon in the run up to the election AND read word-for-word the speech on this topic that Bannon wrote for him as his Inauguration speech. You can simply google the 2020 inauguration speech to find it.
Trump probably did not even understand what he was reading. He certainly did not act on it. There was no vast infrastructure plan from Trump. There was no attempt by Trump to put large numbers of working-class Americans back to work.
I am simply reporting these things, which happened.
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Same thing happened with Trump’s supposed healthcare plan, which he kept saying was “so much better than Obamacare” and would be “coming in a couple weeks.”
It never appeared. There was no Trump healthcare plan, or if there was, it was nixed by the rest of the Repugnican party and/or by oligarchs to whom Trump was beholden and/or by Trump himself.
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Bob: Again, great big silly me. I keep expecting logic and reasonability from even these folks. I guess I am a die-hard optimist. I’m not alone, however, and we need to learn the Trump/Bannon Lesson in a clear-eyed way, while somehow not losing our love for and hold on truth and reasonability. CBK
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