Trump is already delivering on his threat to destroy democracy
You don’t need me to tell you that our current political environment is…horrendous. But, if you’re just following the day-to-day reporting of Trump’s latest outrageous assaults on democracy — you may not realize just how horrendous — and dangerous — the current situation is. For that, you need to step back from each day’s news-cycle and view the larger landscape — to survey the full scope of the damage done in just two weeks — and what it portends for the next four years.
During the 2024 campaign, it was commonplace to warn that a Trump victory could mean the end of democracy — and the emergence of an autocracy/oligarchy in its place.
Trump won anyway. One reason is because too many people did not taking the warnings seriously — dismissing them as partisan hyperbole.
So now, here we are — paying the price for their mistake. Our democracy is in fact disintegrating as I write this. It is happening via the avalanche of executive orders, memos, proclamations, nominations, firings and threats that emanate from the White House on an almost hourly basis. The changes are happening so fast that it is hard to keep up. Blink and you’ve probably missed something important. But that’s MAGA goal: Flood the zone with so much stuff so as to overwhelm the opposition. Even if many things get stopped, the damage will already have been done. And many things will not get stopped — despite our best efforts. Heck, it’s hard just to be aware of it all.
As the AP put it: “Just a little over a week into his second term, President Donald Trump took steps to maximize his power, sparking chaos and what critics contend is a constitutional crisis as he challenges the separation of powers that have defined American government for more than 200 years.”
Robert Reich offers a similar perspective on Trump’s move to consolidate his power, replacing democracy with oligarchy, “substituting loyalists for experts, using retribution to intimidate others, and purging the government’s independent inspectors general…”
Or, as Tom Cruise explained in Mission Impossible:
What follows is my attempt to lay out the full scope of Trump’s actions since his return to the White Houses — so you can grasp the big picture and the inherent danger. I can’t hope to be comprehensive. But I believe even this recitation of the most egregious lowlights should be sufficient.
Project 2025 is happening! Now!
Project 2025 is a right-wing-authored document that offers a playbook for how a Trump administration could essentially take control of the entire government and enact a MAGA-inspired agenda. It has been labelled as “authoritarian” and “apocalyptic.” Because it came to be viewed so negatively by the general public, Trump repeatedly tried to distance himself from it during the 2024 campaign. Of course, he was lying.
Although your won’t see the term “Project 2025” mentioned in any White House statements, Project 2025 is the driving force behind many of Trump’s directives. The most striking example of this is the implementation of Schedule F. As I described in a prior post:
Schedule F would “reclassify tens of thousands of federal workers as political appointees. The workers would thus lose their employment protections and could be terminated at the whim of the President….The workers would then be replaced by partisans whose main qualification is loyalty to Trump rather than any technical skill — and whose primary goal is to please Trump.”
We’re especially seeing this in the Justice Department, where the new “administration has reassigned about 20 senior career Justice Department attorneys” in a move to swiftly “shake up an arm of government that has long drawn his ire.” The Atlantic adds: “These are career people. They are not political…They have developed a real expertise…But this is not merely an attack on expertise. This maneuver has a further effect: to disable opposition.”
To prevent any legal oversight or prohibition of these changes, Trump has moved to purge of at least a dozen inspectors general — individuals who serve as “an internal check on waste, fraud, and abuse at federal agencies.”
The coup-de-grace here is Trump’s offer to “buyout all federal workers,” which Axios described as “the latest step in the White House’s unprecedented move to push career federal workers out of their jobs, and replace them with loyalists — a return to a patronage system that federal law sought to banish more than a century ago.” In other words: This is Project 2025 in action. There is serious question as to whether this is constitutional — but Trump is moving forward anyway.
Of course, we continue to watch the clown parade of Trump cabinet nominees — as they appear before Congress for their confirmations. These include (I still have trouble even contemplating what this will mean) Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for Health and Kash Patel for FBI Director. In essence, this is another Project 2025-inspired example of replacing qualified experts with partisan incompetent hacks — who, in some cases, are opposed to the goals of the agency for which they are nominated to head.
A second major goal of Project 2025, beyond Schedule F, aims for a “rolling back the rights of LGBTQ+ people, limiting reproductive health care, throwing up roadblocks to racial justice, eliminating the Department of Education and diverting public funds to private religious schools, and redefining religious freedom as a license to discriminate.” We are already seeing this in action as “Trump’s executive order aims to restrict education related to race, gender, politics.”
Trampling on the Constitution
Some of what Trump has proposed almost certainly violates the U.S. Constitution and/or existing federal laws. The administration does not view this as a reason for restraint — but rather as a challenge to overcome. To them, it’s all worth a try — even if it is later declared illegal.
Such is the case with Trump’s attempt to eliminate birthright citizenship— a move that “would overturn more than a century of {legal} precedent” and is clearly in violation of the 14th Amendment. If this order stands, it would mean that children born in the U.S. of immigrant mothers (even those here legally in some cases) would not be U.S. citizens and would thus not be eligible for critical educational and health benefits. Needless to say, this is being challenged in court and is temporarily blocked.
Another likely illegal action is Trump’s proposed “freeze” on federal grant spending — an action that caused so much chaos and confusion that the White House was forced to pause the freeze within days of announcing it. If the pause had gone through — it would have brought numerous federal programs, from Medicaid to scientific research, to a complete halt. The stated intent of the pause (echoes of Project 2025) was to allow the Trump administration to evaluate whether the current policies of the recipients were aligned with Trump’s goals. If not, presumably funding would not be restored. Joyce Vance explains how this refusal to spend money authorized by Congress — because Trump disapproves of the program — is clearly in violation of the Impoundment Control Act. Vox warns that “the memo asserts a degree of presidential authority so sweeping that it would wreck one of the core principles of separation of powers.” The program may have been halted for the moment, but don’t breathe too easy. Expect the administration to take another swing at this soon.
And then there’s this: A White House memo directed “the Defense Department and Department of Homeland Security to prepare a 30,000-person migrant facility at Guantánamo Bay” to hold immigrants that Trump deems too untrustworthy to even send back to their countries of origin. With little oversight as to exactly who be at risk to be sent here, this sounds dangerously close to a politically-motivated concentration camp.
Seeking revenge and intimidation
As he promised during the campaign, Trump is exacting revenge on his perceived enemies — while simultaneously threatening retaliation against anyone who might challenge him in the future.
For starters, he removed the security details and/or clearances for people who have been critical of Trump in the past — people such as Mark Milley, Mike Pompeo, John Bolton, and Anthony Fauci. By making the removals so public, there is no doubt that their main purpose was to put the individuals’ safety at risk — and intimidate others from voicing any similar criticisms — rather than attain any legitimate administrative objective.
Trump’s bullying extends to foreign countries: He imposed a 25% tariff on Colombia for all exports to the U.S. simply because Colombia objected to how poorly the U.S. was treating immigrants being deported back to Colombia. As with the grant freeze, Trump was forced to backtrack on this — at least for the moment — after warnings that the fallout would be too damaging to the U.S.
And then there are Trump’s attacks on the media and corporations:
President Trump’s new head of the Federal Communications Commission recently ordered an investigation of NPR and PBS, “with an eye toward unraveling federal funding for all public broadcasting.” The claim is that sponsorship announcements amount to advertising — and should be prohibited lest they lose their government funding, which is the ultimate retaliatory goal.
More generally, Trump’s threats of retaliation have stoked fear amongst mainstream media and corporate leaders, leading to the “big capitulation” — a level of subservience never seen or even imagined before. Recent examples include (1) Google agreeing to go along with Trump’s bizarre demand to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America and (2) Paramount/CBS likely settling with Trump over his suit against 60 Minutes for their interview with Kamala Harris — which Trump claimed had “deceptive editing.” If the settlement happens, it would be an “extraordinary concession by a major U.S. media company to a sitting president, especially in a case in which there is no evidence that the network got facts wrong or damaged the plaintiff’s reputation.”
As Dean Obeidallah concludes, Trump is “following a fascist playbook by targeting media outlets critical of him…and seeking to make himself a dictator for life.“
On an optimistic note (which is hard to find), there has been a mini-revolt of respected journalists — who have quit their jobs rather than continue to work for their cowardly bosses. These include Paul Krugman (from The New York Times), Jim Acosta (from CNN) and Jennifer Rubin (of The Washington Post). Rubin has since gone on to establish The Contrarian — an alternative news source that I highly recommend. Of course, the downside here is that it highlights just how compromised mainstream media has become.
Pardon?
Some things Trump has done are so egregious that they deserve their own category. This is one of them. In what I consider to be the most unpatriotic, unconscionable and unjust (yet legal) action a President has ever done: Trump cavalierly pardoned /or commuted every one convicted in relation to the January 6th insurrection. A blatant attempt at rewriting history, it also condones the violence that was committed, opens the door for these people to commit future violent acts and is a slap in the face to all those injured on that day and all those in the Justice Department who worked tirelessly to obtain the convictions. Just disgusting.
The fire hose
Are you finding the big picture still a bit hazy? If so, here’s a collection of headlines I gathered from just the past couple of days. It captures both the breadth and depth — as well as the terrifying pace — with which Trump is acting. Quoted without comment (as no comment is necessary):
Universities Close Offices, Halt Research in Response to Trump’s Ban on DEI
It’s Hard to Overstate the Brutal Impact of Trump’s Attack on Trans Americans
Trump’s Tariffs Would Reverse Decades of Integration Between U.S. and Mexico
Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China could mean higher inflation and economic disruption.
Sounding the alarm; fighting back
Trump and his cronies are pushing the limits of what the executive branch has the power to do — shattering every imaginable norm — creating chaos and fear along the way. The goal is clear: To purge the executive branch of any opposition to Trump’s agenda; to fill emptied positions with Trump loyalists; to intimidate remaining foes into compliance; to silence critics in the media; to reverse decades of policies that protect the underprivileged; to destroy government agencies Trump views as contrary to his aims; and to consolidate power so that Trump can act as an unrestrained autocrat going forward. In other words, the end of democracy. And it’s working!
Where does this leave us? What can we do to counter this assault? One oft-stated strategy is to set our sights for the 2026 elections — working to make sure that we reverse the Congressional majorities and make clear how unpopular Trump has become. I hope we can do this.
But bear in mind, we are facing a political environment that is unlike anything we have seen in our lifetime — perhaps in the history of the country. Counting on Trump losing popularity is by no means a sure bet. But even if that happens — the problem with waiting for 2026 is that it’s entirely possible we will no longer have free and fair elections by then. Democracy may already be over. At a minimum, so many key positions in government will have been replaced by Trump sycophants, so many changes made to regulations, so many harmful acts carried out and so much power consolidated in the White House — that a midterm election will be unable to stem the tide.
Although it may sound like it at times, I didn’t mean this to be a declaration of despair and defeat. Rather, I wanted to present the big picture — in all its ugliness — so as to wake up and shake up those who may still be complacent about the threat we face. Those who are somehow still assuming that this will all be over in 4 years at most — and then things will return to normal — and all we have to do is wait out the storm. That won’t work. Not this time. The time to sound the alarm was yesterday. To prevent the worst from happening, we have to act — now, today, tomorrow, and every day for the next 4 years. Exactly what we need to do will vary with the circumstances. Right now, it may be as little as a phone call to your Congressperson — urging them to block a nomination or a piece of legislation. It might ultimately require actions aimed to disrupt the workings of the government itself. Hang on…because before things start to get better, they’re almost certain to get a lot worse.
Note: Several of the links in this post are behind paywalls.
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Update: February 2
Wow! In the 24 hours since I posted this blog, numerous articles have appeared (authored by people more informed than I am) that raise a similar level of alarm. A consensus is clearly emerging. Here is just a sampling:
Donald Trump is already president. His latest moves show he wants to be king: “Trump isn’t satisfied with being president in his second term. He wants to be king, surrounded by loyal subjects and unencumbered by oversight restricting what he wants to do.”
The Anti-President: “I don’t want to be an alarmist—I try to avoid that—but as I’m writing this, it looks like we are in the middle of a five-alarm fire.“
January 6 Was Nothing Compared to What We’re Going Through Now: “Unchecked, we are on the path not just to autocracy, but to the worst form of malevolent, abusive dictatorship. It’s not hysteria. It’s not exaggeration. It’s not premature. Where we are is a place we have never been in this country and threat we face is one that is by no means certain that we can survive.“
Meanwhile, as to fighting back, Indivisible offers “How Senate Democrats Can Shut Down Trump’s Agenda with Procedural Hardball.” It’s a great place to start. It recognizes that “Dems are still playing by the old rules, trying to demonstrate that they’re reasonable in the face of an unreasonable MAGA party.” The problem, as they point out, is that we are way past this as a workable strategy. Now is the time to, as much as possible, “Shut it all down.” Say no to everything!