Trump’s 25% tariffs on all aluminum
and steel imported into the U.S. went into effect yesterday, prompting
retaliatory tariffs from the European Union and Canada. The E.U. announced
tariffs on about $28 billion worth of products, including beef and whiskey,
mostly produced by Republican-dominated states. “We deeply regret this
measure,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said. “Tariffs
are taxes. They are bad for business, and even worse for consumers. These
tariffs are disrupting supply chains. They bring uncertainty for the economy.”
Canada also announced new
tariffs on Wednesday on about $21 billion worth of U.S. products, in
retaliation for Trump’s tariffs. François-Philippe Champagne, Canada's
minister of innovation, science, and industry, said: “The U.S. administration
is once again inserting disruption and disorder into an incredibly successful
trading partnership and raising the costs of everyday goods for Canadians and
American households alike.”
With the stock market falling and
business leaders begging Trump to stop the trade machinations that are creating
the volatility that is wrenching the economy downward, Trump said yesterday to
reporters: “[L]ong-term, what I’m doing is making our country strong again.”
In an interview on the CBS Evening
News last night, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, a billionaire financial
executive, was asked whether Trump’s economic policies were “worth it” even if
they cause a recession. “These policies are the most important thing America
has ever had,” Lutnick answered. “It is worth it.”
Former representative Tom
Malinowski (D-NJ) reposted Lutnick’s assertion and said: “In my graduate
thesis, I quoted a hardline communist official from Poland in the 1950s who was
asked about terrible shortages of food and housing. He said people had to sacrifice
and “if that’s what it takes to prove the superiority of socialism, it’s worth
it.”
The days when the Republican
Party were conservatives are long gone. Edmund Burke, the Anglo-Irish
politician and political thinker who began the process of articulating a
conservative political philosophy, did so most famously in response to the
French Revolution. In 1790, a year after the storming of the Bastille prison
symbolized the rebellion of the people against the monarchy, Burke wrote Reflections
on the Revolution in France.
Burke had supported the American
Revolution that had ended less than a decade before largely because he believed
that the American colonists were trying to restore their traditional rights.
But the French Revolution, he thought, was an entirely different proposition.
As revolutionaries in France replaced their country’s traditions with laws and
systems based on their theory of an ideal government, Burke drew back.
He took a stand against radical
change driven by people trying to make the government enforce a specific
political ideology. Ideologically driven government was radical and dangerous,
he thought: quickly, the ideology became more important than the complex
reality of the way society—and people—actually worked.
In 1790, Burke argued that the role
of government was not to impose a worldview, but rather to promote stability,
and that lawmakers could achieve that stability most effectively by supporting
the structures that had proven themselves effective in the past; in his time,
that meant social hierarchies, the church, property, and the family.
“Conservative” meant, literally,
conserving what was already there, without reference to an ideology. Those in
charge of government should make changes slowly, according to facts on the
ground, in order to keep the country stable, he thought. If it behaved this
way, the government, which in his time was usually seen as a negative force in
society, could be a positive one.
In 2025 the Republicans in
charge of the United States of America are not the conservatives they call
themselves; they are the dangerous ideological radicals Burke feared. They
are abruptly dismantling a government that has kept the United States
relatively prosperous, secure, and healthy for the past 80 years. In its place,
they are trying to impose a government based in the idea that a few men should
rule.
The Trump administration’s hits
to the economy have monopolized the news this week, but its swing away from
Europe and toward Russia, antagonizing allies and partners while fawning
over authoritarians like Russia’s president Vladimir Putin, is also a radical
stand, and one that seems likely to destabilize American security. Former
allies have expressed concern over sharing intelligence with the U.S. in the
future, and yesterday, 34 army leaders from the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, the European Union, Japan, and Australia met in Paris without
inviting the United States.
The wholesale destruction of the
U.S.A.’s advanced medical research, especially cancer research, by
firing scientists, canceling grants, banning communications and collaboration,
and stopping travel is also radical and seems unlikely to leave Americans
healthier than before.
Two days ago, news broke that
the administration canceled $800 million worth of grants to Johns Hopkins
University, one of the nation’s top research universities in science and
medicine. Meanwhile, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. has cast doubt on the safe, effective measles vaccine as the disease
continues to spread across the Southwest.
Yesterday, Environmental
Protection Agency administrator Lee Zeldin boasted that the administration is
taking 31 actions to roll back environmental protections. Those include
regulations about electric vehicles and pollution from coal-fired plants. The
administration intends to rescind the EPA’s 2009 finding that the greenhouse
gas emissions that contribute to climate change endanger public health. That
finding is the legal argument for regulations governing car and truck emissions
and power plants.
Also yesterday, the United
States Department of Agriculture, which oversees supplemental food programs,
announced it was cutting about $1 billion in funding that enables schools and
food banks to buy directly from local farms and ranches. This will hit farmers
and producers as well as children and food-insecure families.
In place of the system that has
created relative stability for almost a century, Republicans under President
Donald Trump and his sidekick billionaire Elon Musk are imposing a government
that is based in the idea that a government that works to make people safe,
prosperous, and healthy is simply ripping off wealthy people. Asked if he
felt sorry for those losing their jobs in the government purges, Trump told NBC
News, without evidence: “Sure I do. I feel very badly...but many of them don’t
work at all. Many of them never showed up to work.”
The administration promises that it
is eliminating “waste, fraud, and corruption,” but Judd Legum of Popular
Information today launched the “Musk Watch DOGE Tracker,” which shows
that Musk has overstated the savings he claims by at least 92%, with the
warning that since these identified cuts are illegal and
unconstitutional—Congress appropriates money and writes the laws for how it’s
spent, and courts have agreed that the executive branch has to execute the laws
as they are written—the contracts might not be canceled at all.
That the administration knows it is
not operating on the up-and-up seems clear from its attempts to hide what it is
doing. It has taken weeks for courts to get the administration to say who is
running the “Department of Government Efficiency” and what the body actually
is. The White House has tried to characterize Musk as a senior advisor to the
president to shield him from questioning.
But yesterday, in response to a
lawsuit by 14 attorneys general from Democratic-dominated states arguing that
Musk is acting unconstitutionally, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan
ordered Musk and DOGE to turn over their records and answer questions, giving
them three weeks to comply.
On Tuesday, remaining staffers at
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) received an email under
the name of acting executive secretary Erica Carr at USAID telling them to
shred or burn agency records, despite strict laws about the preservation of
federal documents. “Haphazardly shredding and burning USAID documents and
personnel files seems like a great way to get rid of evidence of wrongdoing
when you’re illegally dismantling the agency,” said Representative Gregory
Meeks (D-NY), the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Two
lawsuits are already challenging the order.
And the corruption in the
administration was out in the open. After Trump advertised Elon Musk’s cars
at the White House, Theodore Schleifer and Maggie Haberman of the New
York Times reported that Musk “has signaled to President Trump’s
advisers in recent days that he wants to put $100 million into groups
controlled by the Trump political operation.” This is separate from Musk’s own
political action committee, which dropped almost $300 million into the 2024
election and which is now pouring money into next month’s election for the
Wisconsin Supreme Court.
The government that Trump and
Musk are destroying, with the complicity of their party, is popular, and
Republican members of Congress are apparently unwilling to have to vote on the
policies that are putting their radical ideology into place. In an
extraordinary move yesterday, House Republicans made it impossible for Congress
to challenge Trump’s tariffs.
The Constitution gives to
Congress, not the president, the power to impose tariffs. But the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act allows the president to impose
tariffs if he declares a national emergency under the National Emergencies Act,
which Trump did on February 1. That same law allows Congress to end such a
declaration of emergency, but if such a termination is introduced—as Democrats
have recently done—it has to be taken up in a matter of days.
But this would force Republicans to
go on record as either supporting or opposing the unpopular economic ideology
Trump and Musk are imposing. So Republicans just passed a measure saying that
for the rest of this congressional session, “each day…shall not constitute a
calendar day” for the purposes of terminating Trump’s emergency declaration.
The Republicans’ legislation
that a day is not a day seems to prove the truth of Burke’s observation that by
trying to force reality to fit their ideology, radical ideologues will end up
imposing tyranny in the name of liberty.
—Heather Cox Richardson
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