“First, I want to thank Trump for
exposing to us how dangerously fragile a democracy really is. What I had been taught was that our
democracy — American democracy — unlike all those pseudo-systems like Argentina
or Turkey or Germany in 1939, was impregnable. People like Trump, narcissists
and power-patriarchs, can simply shape our political world, not around our values,
but around themselves and their personal goals, their ill-gotten gains, their
blatant disregard for any values we thought had been unalterably baked into the
system long before they came. On the contrary, I have begun to think that
politics is a kind of while-we-slept game.
“Second, Trump has shown us how
baseless democracy is if it is not understood and protected by all of those who
take an oath to preserve it.
A presidential election is not meant to give any single person power alone. It
is meant to surround a president with representatives, senators, cabinet
officers and officials of conscience and character, who are first and foremost
responsible for the preservation of the Constitution. They, too, are also
deputized to make themselves as responsible for defending the ideals and vision
of the Constitution as is the president. And so those values, that document,
must be protected — even from the president if necessary. We have seen so
little of that these last four years.
“Third, Trump has shown us that the
makings of a coup run through every form of government, including democracy. Thanks to him, we must never be so
blasé again about the possibility of the overthrow of democracy as we know
it: As in, ‘but we're a democracy so that can't happen to us.’ On the contrary.
The fact is that rather than work with Congress — including his own party's
Republican representatives and senators, a system as powerful as his own —
he trampled them. And Republican representatives, intimidated by him they tell
us now, simply allowed it. No wonder we have so few profiles in courage from
this period.
“Fourth, in the end, I learned that
even ‘party’ meant little to Trump. That seemed to be a refreshing thought
until I realized, too, that though party did not move him, cronyism did, ‘loyalty’
did, personal power did — in fact, personal power was his fatal addiction. But
unfortunately, he taught me too that the likelihood of members of Congress to
yield to intimidation for the sake of saving their own seats and putting petty power
above the welfare of the country is itself a political virus. I admit I was
shocked. I remembered the Republicans who heard every word of testimony against
Richard Nixon and then themselves went as a delegation to tell Nixon it was
time for him to go. We, on the other hand, saw three — three — brave Republican
senators put commitment to the country above loyalty to the Trumpism that
threatened them. So, how can we trust them again?
“Fifth, I am grateful to
past-President Trump for demonstrating how easy it is for a president to simply
pull the boat away from the shore by himself. Thanks to Trump, we learned
the hard way that government by executive orders — presidential determinations
neither vetted nor voted on by Congress — is not a democracy. It is at best a
monarchy in disguise, a monarchy in waiting. The executive order is a
legislative tool that has been growing in popularity. In the modern era,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in the face of a recalcitrant Congress, launched his
New Deal. Worse, he also incarcerated Japanese Americans with it. Before that
era, western states had been created by it. Yet, for all intents and
purposes, that approach to national legislation sank back into the shadows to
be used for little more than minor issues in a world of more important debates
or national emergencies. In our time, however, those doors have been blown open
again by the plague of polarization. Presidents have little power in the face
of political rejection to get anything done except by taking things into
their own hands. But the process deserves watching. It's Trump's executive
orders on border protection, immigration and immigrants, ecological reversals,
federal land usage, infrastructure and the Affordable Care Act that are clear
indicators of how easy it has gotten to legislate outside of legislation. Clearly,
it is a time for serious vigilance if democracy is not to slip away, at the end
of a single pen, unseen.
“Sixth, I am also grateful to Trump
for taking one truism out of the American vocabulary. As in, ‘No, I don't vote. My
single vote won't change anything.’ In fact, your one vote — or its lack — is
still changing things.
“Finally, I am grateful for the gift
of reality Trump has given us as a people. He has forced us to face the difference
between bullying and leading. Leaders who bully are dangerous. Full-grown
politicians, whose own motives are so gross, so self-centered, that they bend
to the local bully for the sake of a longer term, are selling this country out
for Scripture's famous ‘thirty pieces of silver.’ The fragility of our system,
the complicity of Congressional representatives and senators to curry favor
with the executive branch of government in order to secure their own place in
it, the American-style monarchy in the unrestrained use of executive orders,
and the common lack of citizen commitment to the privilege of voting —
reflected in the glee of a 40-something mother who voted for the first time in
this election — has brought this country to the brink. May God help us all,
citizens and political figures at every level, to figure out that the lesson
that will make or break our future lies in realizing that politics is a
seriously righteous act — a socially ethical responsibility, a deeply
spiritual one. The great political question in this country now is a moral one:
Are we devoted to such public morality? Are we up to it? From where I
stand, through it all I learned that the complacency of ‘it can't happen here’
has died here these past four years. Just as it did in Munich in 1939”
(National Catholic Reporter).
[Joan Chittister is a Benedictine
sister of Erie, Pennsylvania.]
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