For
some time, it was possible to believe that many voters could not see the threat Donald Trump poses to America’s liberal democracy, and
many still profess not to see it. But now, a little more than six months from
Election Day, it’s hard to believe they don’t.
The warning
signs are clear enough. Trump himself offers a new reason for concern almost
every day. People may choose to ignore the warnings or persuade themselves not
to worry, but they can see what we all see, and that should be enough.
How to
explain their willingness to support Trump despite the risk he poses to our
system of government? The answer is not rapidly changing technology, widening
inequality, unsuccessful foreign policies or unrest on university campuses but
something much deeper and more fundamental. It is what the Founders worried
about and Abraham Lincoln warned about: a decline in what they called public
virtue.
They feared
it would be hard to sustain popular support for the revolutionary liberal
principles of the Declaration of Independence, and they worried that the
virtuous love of liberty and equality would in time give way to narrow, selfish
interest.
Although
James Madison and his colleagues hoped to establish a government on the solid
foundation of self-interest, even Madison acknowledged that no government by
the people could be sustained if the people themselves did not have sufficient
dedication to the liberal ideals of the Declaration. The people had to love
liberty, not just for themselves but as an abstract ideal for all humans.
Americans are going down this route today because too many
no longer care enough whether the system the Founders created survives and are
ceding the ground to those, led by Trump, who actively seek to overthrow what
so many of them call “the regime.”
This “regime” they are referring to is the unique political
system established by the Founders based on the principles of universal
equality and natural rights. That, plain and simple, is what this election is
about. “A republic if you can keep it,” Benjamin Franklin allegedly
said of the government created by the Constitutional Convention
in 1787. This is the year we may choose not to keep it.
A healthy
republic would not be debating whether Trump and his followers seek the
overthrow of the Founders’ system of liberal democracy. What more do people
need to see than his well-documented attempt to prevent the peaceful transfer
of power with the storming of the U.S. Capitol, the elaborate scheme to create
false electoral slates in key states, the clear evidence that he bullied
officials in some states to “find” more
votes, and to persuade Vice President Mike Pence not
to certify the legitimate results?
What more do they need to know than that Trump continues to insist he won that election and celebrates as heroes and “patriots” the people who invaded the U.S. Capitol and smashed policemen’s faces with the stated aim of forcing Congress to negate the election results? As one 56-year-old Michigan woman present at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, explained: “We weren’t there to steal things. We weren’t there to do damage. We were just there to overthrow the government.”
Trump not only acknowledges his goals, past and present; he
promises to do it again if he loses this year. For the third straight election,
he is claiming that if he loses, then the vote will have been fraudulent. He
has warned of uprisings, of “bedlam” and
a “bloodbath,” and
he has made clear that he will again be the promoter of this violence, just as
he was on Jan. 6.
Trump explicitly warned
in 2020 that he would not accept the election results if he
lost, and he didn’t. This year he is saying it again. Were
there no other charges against him, no other reason to be concerned about his
return to the presidency, this alone would be sufficient to oppose him.
He does not respect and has never pledged to abide by the
democratic processes established by the Constitution. On the contrary, he has
explicitly promised to violate the Constitution when he deems it necessary.
That by itself makes him a unique candidate in American history and should be
disqualifying.
This kind of
open challenge to our democracy was never meant to be addressed by the courts.
As the Founders well understood, you don’t serve a subpoena to a would-be
tyrant and tell him to lawyer up. Nor was it meant to be addressed by the
normal processes of democratic elections. They knew, and feared, that a
demagogue could capture the allegiance of enough voters to overthrow the
system.
That was why they gave Congress, and particularly the
Senate, supposedly more immune from popular pressures, the power to impeach and
remove presidents and to deny them the opportunity to run again — and not
simply because they violated some law but because they posed a clear and
present danger to the republic.
After Trump’s attempt to
overthrow the government in 2020, Congress had a chance to use
the method prescribed by the Founders in precisely the circumstances they
envisioned. But Senate Republicans, out of a combination of ambition and
cowardice, refused to play the
vital role the Founders envisioned for them. The result is that
the nightmare feared by the Founders is one election away from becoming reality…
-Robert Kagan
For the entire article:
Opinion
| Robert Kagan: Will Trump voters destroy America’s radical democracy? - The
Washington Post
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