Gordon L. Weil
What does Donald Trump want to do with the presidency?
He makes his intentions clear, though less clear is whether
he can turn his plans into reality.
Kamala Harris describes him as “unserious,” but cautions that voters
ought to consider as “serious” the risks of his presidency.
Trump favors a strong presidency, enjoying powers he can
exercise with little or no control by Congress and with the expected support of
his Supreme Court majority. His next
term, if he gets it, could look a lot like authoritarian government.
One indicator is his obvious affinity for leaders who bear
the title of president, but who exercise strong or total control of their
national governments. He almost
fraternally refers to Russia’s Putin, China’s Xi and North Korea’s Kim. In fact, he likes their style and their
complete freedom of action.
The presidential system of government places elected presidents,
serving fixed terms, at the head of the executive branch alongside legislative
bodies that cannot readily remove them, but can limit their powers. In parliamentary systems, the legislative
bodies control and can remove the top executive, usually the prime minister.
In the U.S. system, the checks on a president are a key
element of democracy. The contrast between
democratic balance and the authoritarian rule of false presidents is
obvious.
Independent ranking systems are surely not absolutely
correct, but they offer strong signals that prove the point. Britain’s
Economist Intelligence Unit ranks countries by their degree of democracy. Among the counties ranked as being “full
democracy,” almost all in this category have parliamentary systems.
The U.S. presidential system is rated in the “flawed
democracy” group, which also includes India, Poland and Hungary. America gets a high rating for “electoral
process,” but a weak rating for “functioning of government.” There’s also an “authoritarian” group, which
includes Russia, China and North Korea, operating as one-party states.
Trump plans to use his governmental powers to pursue the political
enemies he calls “vermin,” expel millions of migrants, and deploy the military
to carry out his policies. Sounds like
an autocrat.
His extreme departure from national norms leads conservative
Republicans, who may like his policies on the economy and immigration, to
endorse Harris with whom they may disagree on the issues. She is simply safer.
In the White House, Trump would be likely to do whatever
pleases the right-wing constituency that put him in office. Although he honestly reports that he has not
read the 887-page Project 2025 blueprint, he is likely to follow its right-wing
manifesto. He has little of his own
policy, but depends heavily on outside, conservative advocates.
Under its terms, the Justice Department and the FBI would be
bought firmly under his control. The
Education Department would be abolished, and the Federal Reserve brought under greater political control. No agency would be missed.
Trump would be able to take control of the government. Though the president is supposed to be constrained
by Congress, it has failed to do its job.
It delegates much of its power to executive agencies. The Senate is often unable to act, thanks to
its rules allowing decisions to be blocked by a minority of senators.
The Supreme Court’s July decision, aptly named Trump v.
United States, gave the president almost complete immunity from legal scrutiny for
all but his most personal actions. And who gets to decide if his actions are
presidential or personal? The Supreme
Court, now dominated by his allies.
This decision does more for placing the presidency above
Congress and the states than any other event in American history. It could easily mean that limits no longer
exist on a president using the military for domestic, political purposes.
Congress, because it is ineffective except in doling out
benefits and increasing the debt, and the Court, because it has become so
obviously partisan, have become quite unpopular. The unfavorable rating of Congress has
reached 76 percent, and it is 51 percent for the Supreme Court.
The remaining option for controlling presidential excess is impeachment
and conviction. But impeachment has become
mere political routine, and conviction continues to be impossible and
ineffective.
Trump covets unlimited power, which no president of either
party is meant to have. The pathway to unchecked
presidential power has been paved by the Supreme Court’s decision. The evidence is that it intended to achieve
this result before the election. That
leaves the decision to the voters.
The Court’s Roe v. Wade decision on abortion established
policy in the absence of congressional action. Trump v. U.S. did so as well. As Roe shows, Court decisions can be
reversed. Congress can remove the Court’s
jurisdiction, but seldom does. Presidents
can reshape the Court by their appointments.
A political movement pushed the reversal of Roe v.
Wade. A similar effort should now demand
the reversal of Trump v. U.S.
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