Trump’s threat to cancel the midterm elections is not a feign. He attempted to overturn the results of the 2020 election and said he would not accept the outcome of the 2024 election if he lost. He ruminates about defying the Constitution to serve a third term. He is determined to retain absolute control — buttressed by an obsequious Republican majority — in Congress.
He fears, if he loses control of Congress, impeachment. He fears impediments to the rapid reconfiguration of America as an authoritarian state. He fears losing the monuments he is building to himself — his name emblazoned on federal buildings, including the Kennedy Center, his scrapping of free entry to National Parks on Martin
Luther King Jr. Day and replacing it with his own birthday, his seizure
of Greenland and who knows, maybe Canada, his ability to put cities, such as Minneapolis,
under siege and snatch legal residents off the streets.
Dictators love elections as long as they are fixed. The
dictatorships I covered in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and the
Balkans staged highly choreographed election spectacles. These spectacles were
a cynical prop whose outcome was preordained. They were used to legitimize iron
control over a captive population, mask the enrichment of the dictator, his
family and his inner circle, criminalize all dissent and ban opposition
political parties in the name of “the will of the people.”
When Saddam Hussein held a presidential referendum in
Oct. 1995, the only question on the ballot was “Do you approve of
President Saddam Hussein being the President of the Republic?” Voters marked
‘yes’ or ‘no.’ The official results saw Hussein win 99.96 percent of some 8.4
million votes cast. Turnout was reported at 99.47 percent. His counterpart in Egypt,
the former general Hosni Mubarak, in 2005 was re-elected for a fifth consecutive six-year term with
a more modest mandate of 88.6 percent of the vote. My less than
reverential coverage of the elections held in Syria in 1991, where
there was only one candidate on the ballot, President Hafez al-Assad, who
reportedly got 99.9 percent of the vote, saw me banned from the country.
These spectacles are the model, I expect, for what comes
next, unless Trump gets his deepest wish, which is to emulate Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia — whose security detail assassinated my colleague and friend Jamal Khashoggi
in 2018 in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul — and hold no elections at all.
Wannabe president-for-life Trump floats the idea of canceling the 2026 midterm
elections, telling Reuters that, “when you think of it, we shouldn’t even have
an election.” When President Volodymyr Zelensky informed Trump elections were
not held in Ukraine because of the war, Trump gushed, “So you mean if we happen to be in a war with
somebody, no more elections? Oh, that’s good.”
Trump told The New York Times he regrets not directing the National Guard to seize
voting machines after the 2020 election. He wants to abolish mail-in voting, along with voting machines and
tabulators, which allow boards of elections to post results on election night.
Better to slow the process down and like the Chicago political machine under
Mayor Richard J. Daley, stuff boxes with ballots after the polls close to
ensure victory.
Trump’s administration is prohibiting voter registration drives at naturalization centers.
It is imposing nation-wide restrictive voter ID laws. It
is reducing the hours that federal employees have to
leave work and vote. In Texas, the new redistricting map blatantly disenfranchises Black and Latino voters, a move upheld
by the Supreme Court. It is expected to eradicate five Congressional Democratic seats.
Our money-drenched elections, coupled with aggressive gerrymandering, mean few races for Congress are competitive. Recent redistricting has, so far, all but guaranteed the Republicans another nine seats in Texas, Missouri, North Carolina, and Ohio and six for the Democrats, five in California and one in Utah. Republicans intend to carry out more redistricting in Florida and Democrats plan a redistricting ballot initiative in Virginia. If the Supreme Court continues to gut the Voting Rights Act, then Republican redistricting will explode, possibly cementing into place a Republican victory whether the majority of voters want it or not. No one can call redistricting democratic.
The Supreme Court’s ruling in Citizens United took from us any real input
into elections. Citizens United permitted unlimited money from corporations and
wealthy individuals to rig the election process in the name of protected speech
under the First Amendment. It ruled that heavily financed and organized
lobbying by large corporations is an application of the people’s right to
petition their government.
Our most basic rights, including the freedom from
wholesale government surveillance, have been steadily revoked by judicial and
legislative fiat.
The “consent of the governed” is a cruel joke.
There are few substantial differences between the
Democrats and Republicans. They exist to provide the illusion of representative
democracy. The Democrats and their liberal apologists adopt tolerant positions
on issues regarding race, religion, immigration, women’s rights and sexual
identity, and pretend this is politics. The right wing uses those on the
margins of society — especially immigrants and the phantom “radical left” — as
scapegoats. But on all the major issues — war, trade deals, austerity, militarized
police, the vast carceral state and deindustrialization — they are in lockstep.
“One cannot point to any national institution[s] that can
accurately be described as democratic,” the political philosopher Sheldon
Wolin noted in his book “Democracy Incorporated,” “surely not in the highly managed,
money-saturated elections, the lobby-infested Congress, the imperial
presidency, the class-biased judicial and penal system, or, least of all, the
media.”
Wolin called our system of governance “inverted
totalitarianism.” It paid outward fealty to the façade of electoral politics,
the Constitution, civil liberties, freedom of the press, the independence of
the judiciary, and the iconography, traditions and language of American
patriotism, while it allowed corporations and oligarchs to effectively seize
all of the mechanisms of power to render the citizen impotent.
The emptiness of the political landscape under “inverted
totalitarianism” saw politics merge with entertainment. It fostered a ceaseless
political burlesque, a politics without politics. The subject of empire, along
with unregulated corporate power, endless war, poverty and social inequality,
became taboo.
These political spectacles create manufactured political
personalities, Trump’s fictitious persona, a product of “The Apprentice.” They
thrive on empty rhetoric, sophisticated public relations, slick advertising,
propaganda and the constant use of focus groups and opinion polls to loop back
to voters what they want to hear. The vapid, issueless and celebrity-driven
presidential campaign of Kamala Harris was a sterling example of this political
performance art.
The assault on democracy, carried out by the two ruling
parties, set the stage for Trump. They emasculated our democratic institutions,
stripped us of our most basic rights and cemented into place the machinery of
authoritarian control, including the imperial presidency. All Trump had to do
was flick the switch.
The indiscriminate police violence familiar in poor urban
communities, where militarized police serve as judge, jury and executioner, long ago handed
the state the power to “legally” harass and kill citizens with impunity. It
spawned the largest prison population in the world. This
evisceration of civil liberties and due process has now been turned on the rest
of us. Trump did not initiate it. He expanded it. Terror is the point.
Trump, like all dictators, is intoxicated by militarism.
He is calling for the Pentagon’s budget to be raised from $1 trillion to $1.5
trillion. Congress, in passing Trump’s One Big Beautiful Act, has allocated more than $170 billion for border and
interior enforcement, including $75 billion for ICE over the next four years.
That is more than the yearly budget for all local and state law enforcement
agencies combined.
“When a constitutionally limited government utilizes
weapons of horrendous destructive power, subsidizes their development, and
becomes the world’s largest arms dealer,” Wolin writes, “the Constitution is
conscripted to serve as power’s apprentice rather than its conscience.”
He goes on:
That the patriotic citizen unswervingly supports the
military and its huge budget means that conservatives have succeeded in
persuading the public that the military is distinct from government. Thus, the
most substantial element of state power is removed from public debate.
Similarly, in his/her new status as imperial citizen the believer remains
contemptuous of bureaucracy yet does not hesitate to obey the directives issued
by the Department of Homeland Security, the largest and most intrusive governmental
department in the history of the nation. Identification with militarism and
patriotism, along with the images of American might projected by the media,
serves to make the individual citizen feel stronger, thereby compensating for
the feelings of weakness visited by the economy upon an overworked, exhausted,
and insecure labor force.
The Democrats in the next election — if there is one —
will offer up least-worst alternatives while doing little or nothing to thwart
the march toward authoritarianism. They will remain hostage to the demands of
corporate lobbyists and oligarchs. The party, which stands for nothing and
fights for nothing, could well hand Trump a victory in the midterms. But Trump
does not want to take that chance.
Trump and his minions are energetically closing the last
exit built into the system that prevents absolute dictatorship. They intend to
orchestrate the sham elections familiar in all dictatorships or abolish them.
They are not joking. This will be the death blow to the American experiment.
There will be no going back. We will become a police state. Our freedoms,
already under heavy assault, will be extinguished. At that point, only mass mobilizations and strikes will thwart the solidification of the
dictatorship. And such actions, as we see in Minneapolis, will be greeted with
lethal state repression.
The subverting of the next elections will offer two stark
choices to Trump’s most vocal opponents. Exile or arrest and imprisonment at
the hands of ICE thugs.
Resistance to the beast, as in all dictatorships, will
come at a very high cost.
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