By Charles C. W. Cooke
Thursday, June 03, 2021
Two days ago, the New York Times’s
Maggie Haberman reported that Donald
Trump “has been telling a number of people he’s in contact with that he expects
he will get reinstated by August.” In response, many figures on the right
inserted their fingers into their ears and started screaming about fake news.
Instead, they should have listened — because Haberman’s
reporting was correct. I can attest, from speaking to an array of different
sources, that Donald Trump does indeed believe quite genuinely that he — along
with former senators David Perdue and Martha McSally — will be “reinstated” to
office this summer after “audits” of the 2020 elections in Arizona, Georgia,
and a handful of other states have been completed. I can attest, too, that
Trump is trying hard to recruit journalists, politicians, and other influential
figures to promulgate this belief — not as a fundraising tool or an infantile
bit of trolling or a trial balloon, but as a fact.
It will be tempting for weary conservatives to dismiss
this information as “old news” or as “an irrelevance.” It will be tempting,
too, to downplay the enormity of what is being claimed, or to change the
subject, or to attack the messengers by implying that they must “hate” Trump
and his voters. But such temptations should be assiduously avoided. We are not
talking here about a fringe figure within the Republican tent, but about a
man who hopes to make support for his outlandish claims “a
litmus test of sorts as he decides whom to endorse for state and federal contests
in 2022 and 2024.” Conservatives understand why it mattered that the press
lost its collective mind over Russia after Trump’s fair-and-square victory in
2016. They understand why it mattered that Hillary Clinton publicly described Trump as an “illegitimate
president” who had “stolen” the election. And they understand why it mattered
that Jimmy Carter insisted that Trump had “lost the election” and been
“put into office because the Russians interfered.” They should understand why
this matters, too.
The scale of Trump’s delusion is quite startling. This is
not merely an eccentric interpretation of the facts or an interesting foible,
nor is it an irrelevant example of anguished post-presidency chatter. It is a
rejection of reality, a rejection of law, and, ultimately, a rejection of the
entire system of American government. There is no Reinstatement Clause within
the United States Constitution. Hell, there is nothing even approximating a
Reinstatement Clause within the United States Constitution. The election has
been certified, Joe Biden is the president, and, until 2024, that is all there
is to it. It does not matter what one’s view of Trump is. It does not matter
whether one voted for or against Trump. It does not matter whether one views
Trump’s role within the Republican Party favorably or unfavorably. We are
talking here about cold, hard, neutral facts that obtain irrespective of one’s
preferences; it is not too much to ask that the former head of the executive
branch should understand them.
Just how far out there is Trump’s theory? Consider that,
even if it were true that the 2020 election had been stolen — which it is
absolutely not — his belief would still be absurd. It could be
confirmed tomorrow that agents working for a combination of al-Qaeda,
Venezuela, and George Soros had hacked into every single voting machine in the
country and altered the totals by tens of millions, and it would remain the
case there is no mechanism within the American legal order for a do-over of any
sort. In such an eventuality, there would be indictments, an impeachment drive,
and a constitutional crisis. But, however bad it got, Donald Trump would not be
“reinstated” to the presidency. That is not how America works, how American has
ever worked, or how America can ever work. American
politicians do not lose their reelection races only to be reinstalled later on,
as might the second-place horse in a race whose winner was disqualified. The
idea is otherworldly and obscene.
There is nothing to be gained for conservatism by
pretending otherwise. To acknowledge that Trump is living in a fantasy world
does not wipe out his achievements or render anything else he has said
incorrect. It does not endorse Joe Biden or hand the Republican Party over to
Bill Kristol or knock down an inch of the wall on the border. It merely demands
that Donald Trump be treated like any other person: subject to gravity, open to
rebuttal, and liable to be laughed at when he becomes so unmoored from the real
world that it is hard to know where to begin in attempting to explain him.
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