By Kevin D. Williamson
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Is Donald Trump preparing for his next shot at a coup
d’état? The fact that we have to ask the question—and that it is not
entirely laughable—is one of the reasons we should not have elected him
president a second time.
(We should not have elected him a first time, either, but
the reasons were different in 2016.)
Here are some hypothetical headlines that sound a lot
like what one expects to read about foreign despots staging an autogolpe–or
that could easily and accurately be written in any American newspaper right
now: Citing ‘Emergency,’ President Dispatches Troops to Capital City;
President, Fearing Upcoming Election, Declares ‘Emergency’; President Takes
Control of Capitol Police to Address Fictitious Emergency, Mulls Expanding
Takeovers to Other Cities; President Installs Loyalists in Key Law-Enforcement
and Military Posts; President Accuses Political Rivals of ‘Treason.’
That would be worrisome stuff from any president. But
Trump’s actions in Washington (and in Los Angeles before that) are part of a
larger pattern of behavior. We should begin with—and, if we were a serious
people, we could end with it—the fact that he attempted to stage a coup
d’état in 2021, after losing the 2020 election to Joe Biden. Trump’s
post-election coup attempt proceeded along lines that will be familiar to
anyone who knows the history of such coups, combining raw thuggery with
legalistic shenanigans: At the Capitol, there was ordinary political violence,
but this was, in reality, less significant than the president’s attempt to cook
up legal and administrative pretexts for nullifying the election results while
coercing and threatening those who resisted his efforts—and it means something
to be threatened by the president of these United States.
Trump’s contempt for law and order is obvious enough, and
not only from the felony convictions on his rap sheet and the more meaningful
felony convictions he very likely would have endured had the documents
case not been quashed. Also indicative of that contempt: the abuse of the
pardon power that was not least evident in his general amnesty for the January
6 seditionists, his solicitousness
regarding the legal expenses of those who carry
out violence on his behalf, his elevation of lightly
qualified
sycophants
to key law enforcement, judicial,
and military
positions, his undisguisable terror regarding the Jeffrey Epstein case, and his
reiterated admiration for autocrats such as Vladimir
Putin (if Trump were any closer to him, he’d be sitting in the Russian
dictator’s lap literally rather than merely figuratively), Xi Jinping (“He’s
now president for life, president for life. And he’s great”), and Kim
Jong Un.
Trump has convulsed the world economy by imposing
national sales taxes on Americans (he calls them “tariffs”) in an arbitrary and
illegal way; he has proposed a pay-to-play
skim targeting microchip manufacturers that is both corrupt and
unconstitutional; he refuses to enforce the law against TikTok for corrupt
personal reasons. With Uday
and Qusay taking the lead while dad futzes around in the White House, the
Trump family has used the presidency to extract billions of dollars out of
favor-seekers.
The president is worried about the midterms. He is
worried about being impeached—again. And he should be worried, inasmuch as he
deserved his first two impeachments and would very much deserve a third. The
economic signals are not great.
And now the president is dispatching troops to the
nation’s capital.
To do what? Logistics and support, we are told—as though
Washington’s very real but improving crime problems were the result of
insufficient logistical resources rather than the city leadership’s ideological
opposition to dealing with vagrancy, harassment, and the kind of low-level
crime that eventually becomes major crime. (One report
from 2021 estimates that something on the order of 500 people are responsible
for as much as 70 percent of D.C. gun crime.) But, of course, this is Donald
Trump we are talking about, a creature of the less-respectable quarters of show
business: reality television, pro wrestling, and pornography. From the point of
view of showmanship, it does not matter what the troops deployed to Washington
actually do—it matters only that Trump can say that he sent in the troops and
then maybe throw another nauseating parade for himself.
If this were, say, President Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
the least responsible voices on the right would be talking about “Second
Amendment remedies.”
The president’s actions raise the question: Is this only
the theater of authoritarianism, or is it a rehearsal of prepositioning
assets for a more general state of phony emergency to justify armed federal
bullying—or worse—of Democrat-run cities in the run-up to the midterms or,
possibly, in the wake of a midterm election in which Republicans desire
to nullify the result? In one sense, it doesn’t matter that much: Even if it is
only theater, using military resources for theatrical-political purposes is in
itself corrupt, an abuse of power that would, even without the broader context
of Trump’s abuses and irresponsibility, in itself justify his removal from
office.
In another sense, of course, it matters profoundly.
Ten years ago, asking whether the president was laying
the foundation for a coup would have sounded, to me, like crazy talk. (And I
did hear crazy talk of that kind from time to time, memorably on one occasion
from Walter Cronkite speaking about George W. Bush, convinced that the affable
Methodist was secretly fronting some kind of Christian mujahideen.) But
one cannot discount the possibility that the guy who tried, in however
incompetent and cowardly a fashion, to stage a coup d’état the last time
he lost an election will try to stage a coup d’état the next time an
election doesn’t go his way. It is like petting a dog that you know, for
a fact, has rabies—the dog may not bite you, but that doesn’t make you any less
stupid.
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