Saturday, January 22, 2022
Word to the Wise
In November 1800, on his second day in an Executive Mansion still under
construction, President John Adams wrote a letter to his wife, Abigail, that
included these words – "I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this
House and on all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise
Men ever rule under this roof."
In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt
had those words inscribed in the fireplace mantle in the State Dining Room, where they remain today.
Since George Washington, the men who have run this country have neither been always
wise nor always honest, but they have been human, with behaviors good, bad,
indifferent and, in some cases, pathological.
Despite achieving through their ambition, drive and hard work the high office, what sets a President apart from
everyone else is the house they inhabit and the power the voters give them for a
brief period of time to administer a nation that remains a work in progress.
Government is not always answerable to the people (look at the latest failure
for voting rights), but this is what Americans cherish about democracy—casting a
vote for their candidate, from local tax collector to President, which makes
them a part of the government that serves them.
Deep within the American spirit is the firm belief that presidents are determined neither by divine right nor
wealth, but by every adult-age American registered to vote.
Voting today is under threat by anti-democratic forces unleashed by former Republican President
Donald Trump and his failed attempt to thwart the Constitution to keep his grip on power. No longer in power, Trump
now encourages lawmakers in state houses his party controls to draft and pass
laws to suppress, if not altogether deny, Americans their right.
No President in the history of the Republic attempted such autocratic moves and for such a petty
narcissistic reason—he was embarrassed to
look like a loser. That’s an autocratic trait that becomes increasingly dangerous when those
around the autocrat feed his narcissism.
Trump turned to
loyalists among his staff,
Congress,
state houses,
former and active military,
the judiciary,
law firms
and
the GOP
in his effort to steal the 2020 election. They spread disproven claims of voter fraud, swamped the courts with one
baseless lawsuit after another, and organized a coup attempt that left five
dead.
In contrast, Trump’s predecessors, whether they won or lost, relied on
their abiding faith in the will of the voters, the Constitution and the rule of
law. They also accepted their loss.
In light of the hundreds of investigations and arrests by the Justice Department
related to the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection, and the hundreds of witnesses
interviewed by the
House’s January 6th Committee,
can we ever again expect, as Adams prayed, “honest and wise Men [and women]” to
occupy the White House?
That’s relative, of course, but what about future Oval
Office occupants?
Trump’s strongman approach has inspired like-minded candidates
for local, state and federal office. Since his 2016 election, Republican voters
seem to show preference for autocratic leaders who rule rather than democratic
leaders who govern. They should be careful what they wish for.
Preference for autocratic rule has simmered in the GOP for decades. Conservative congressional
members, governors and state and local elected officials started to show disdain
for democracy when they refused to accept the legitimate election of the first
African American as president, Barack Obama. Instead, they entertained
conspiracy theories about his birthplace.
It was not just his skin color that
riled them, but Obama’s election represented the progressive sentiment they
don’t want to admit
runs deep among voters.
Since the 1990s, GOP conservatives have struggled to reshape a nation that was forged through depression and war on Rooseveltian principles (that’s FDR and Teddy) that government would help ensure fairness and equality for all. New Deal
programs like Social Security and the Fair Labor Standards Act (provided the
minimum wage, banned child labor, etc.) ingrained that philosophy in federal
policy and the American mindset.
Unable to get a majority of American voters to
agree to
dismantling such programs, to returning to an era when business dictated to government what kind of
government voters would get, the GOP turned to building a conservative-dominant
Supreme Court that could help achieve what the party long sought, to
drown government “in the bathtub.”
In this effort, Republican leader and Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell ruptured
Senate rules and decorum to block Obama from appointing a justice, leaving a
vacancy for the next President, which McConnell hoped would not be a Democrat.
Seeing the chance to perhaps secure even more justices, he and the GOP went for
Trump, despite their grave doubts about the man.
As President, Trump was able to
appoint three conservative justices for a 6-3 majority that has demonstrated a
dislike for Rooseveltian principles. It recently overruled mandating vaccines in
the workplace, which means those who take measures to protect themselves and
others around them are subject to the unvaccinated worker who can freely infect
fellow workers, even some who may be immuno-compromised, and face no
consequences.
Now, following Trump’s presidency and its one-year aftermath, the
prominently white GOP is essentially an autocratic movement. A majority of
Republican voters, contrary to all evidence, believe Trump’s lie that Joe Biden
stole the election. In some of the state’s the party controls,
Republicans enacted laws
that allow one person or a small group of persons to decide the winners of
elections no matter the will of the people or the principles of the
Constitution. GOP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wants to create an election
police force answerable to him.
As history shows, autocracies never serve the people and certainly never end
well. Autocratic leaders are consumed with serving themselves, regardless of the
damage to their nation. Just look at what Vladimir Putin has done to Russia and
some of his neighbors like Ukraine. Look at what two of the world’s most
notorious autocrats – Hitler and Mussolini – did to Germany and Italy. Look what
Saddam Hussein did to Iraq.
The Founding Fathers chose democracy because –
contrary to Trump’s “I alone can fix it” claim – one person cannot effectively
lead a nation without advice, consent and compromise with voters and their
chosen representatives. The three-branch system – executive, legislative and
judicial – ensures checks and balances. There is neither checks nor balances in
an autocracy.
A word to the pro-autocratic forces moving to re-make America,
keep in mind that no autocratic ruler has proven honest or wise, just harmful
and destructive.
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