By Charles C. W. Cooke
Thursday, September 01, 2022
On Truth Social this week, Donald Trump, in response
to the news that the FBI had disgracefully put pressure on Facebook
to suppress the true story of Hunter Biden’s laptop, insisted that he must be
immediately reinstalled as president of the United States. “REMEDY: Declare the
rightful winner,” Trump wrote. “Or, and this would be the minimal solution,
declare the 2020 Election irreparably compromised and have a new Election,
immediately!”
Well, then.
It is increasingly tempting to ignore these outbursts of
constitutionally illiterate election-trutherism as a distraction. Certainly, if
one wishes to, one can write them off as a mere sideshow — as the detached
and irrelevant ravings of an unemployed septuagenarian has-been. At this point,
one might say, Trump is just another Crazy Uncle with a social-media account.
And, besides, instead of parsing what he says on the Internet, shouldn’t we be
focused on the FBI’s continuing self-abasement, which occasioned the flare-up
in the first instance?
But the thing is: None of that is really true, is it?
Donald Trump has been talking like this for 18 months now. He is not some Crazy
Uncle; he is the most likely person to be the next Republican nominee for
president — and, for that matter, the next president. And while I strongly
agree that the FBI needs wholesale reform — if not outright abolition — that
does not change the fact that what Trump is saying in response on his failing
social-media platform is nuts.
Last year, the New York Times’ Maggie Haberman
got a great deal of grief for reporting that Trump earnestly believes that he
can — and possibly will — be reinstated as president before the 2024 election
has been held. But Haberman was correct: Trump does believe this. And that he
believes it should disqualify him from holding office. It should disqualify him
because it represents a willful rejection of the American system of government,
which does not allow for arbitrarily reinstating former presidents or holding
do-over elections. It should disqualify him because it represents yet another
attempt to stage a coup against the rightful winner of the 2020 election. And
it should disqualify him because it exhibits a raw contempt for the public,
which does not deserve to be told such brazen lies. Americans may — no,
Americans should — disagree about anything they wish to
disagree about. But, at the very least, they ought to agree unanimously to
reject (or remove) political candidates who promise ahead of
time that they intend to violate the rules by which they are legally bound.
Eighteen months have now passed since Joe Biden was inaugurated, and Donald
Trump is still searching for illegitimate ways to undo his
loss. That, in and of itself, is proof of his unfitness for office.
Why does Donald Trump say such things? There are two
possibilities. The first is that Donald Trump earnestly believes that he
won the 2020 presidential election, and that, at some point soon, he is going
to be parachuted back into the White House. The second is that Donald Trump cares
so little about the American system of government that he is willing to spend
his days inventing ever-more-outlandish theories as to how he might crowbar
himself into the Oval Office. Only Donald Trump can know which of these
possibilities is true, but both are proof that he’s a lunatic, and that the
Republican primary electorate should reject him in favor of someone who is able
— or willing — to acquiesce to our most basic constitutional rules.
For his direct attack on Congress’s constitutional powers
— and his repeated attempts to rewrite the Twelfth Amendment — Donald Trump
should have been impeached and convicted. The riot of January 6 was certainly
abhorrent, but it was not, in fact, the root problem with Donald Trump’s
conduct during the post-election period; a thousand or so rioters, upsetting
and dangerous as their behavior might have been, were never going to overthrow
the federal government. No, the root problem with Donald Trump’s behavior
during the post-election period was that Donald Trump attempted to stay in
power despite having lost, in violation of America’s most fundamental law. Had
nobody showed up in D.C. on January 6 — had there been no riot, had Trump given
no public speeches on the topic — that attempt alone would have been sufficient
to disqualify him from office forever. But that he’s still playing
this game, almost two years later? That is insane.
No comments:
Post a Comment