The first 100 days of President Trump’s second term have done more damage to American democracy than anything else since the demise of Reconstruction. Mr. Trump is attempting to create a presidency unconstrained by Congress or the courts, in which he and his appointees can override written law when they want to. It is precisely the autocratic approach that this nation’s founders sought to prevent when writing the Constitution.I think the character of American government has already been fundamentally altered, though the changes might still be reversible. I'm not certain that we'll have future presidents elected in the normal manner. Obviously, we need to keep fighting, in order to minimize the damage Trump and his allies are doing.
Mr. Trump has the potential to do far more harm in the remainder of his term. If he continues down this path and Congress and the courts fail to stop him, it could fundamentally alter the character of American government. Future presidents, seeking to either continue or undo his policies, will be tempted to pursue a similarly unbound approach, in which they use the powers of the federal government to silence critics and reward allies.
The Times ed board agrees on the need to fight, but a couple of paragraphs in, we're told that the fighting needs to be done in a very particular way:
The patriotic response to today’s threat is to oppose Mr. Trump. But it is to do so soberly and strategically, not reflexively or performatively.What does this mean? It means that the house is burning down, but some of us are using the wrong tone to yell "Fire!"
Given the threat that Mr. Trump presents, we understand the urge to speak out in maximalist ways about almost everything he does. It can feel emotionally satisfying, and simply like the right thing to do, during dark times. But the stakes are too high to prioritize emotion over effectiveness. The best way to support American democracy is to build the largest possible coalition to defend it. It is to call out all Mr. Trump’s constitutional violations while diligently avoiding exaggeration about what qualifies as a violation. Liberals who conflate conservative policies with unconstitutional policies risk sending conservatives back into Mr. Trump’s camp.I agree that Trump should also be opposed by people who aren't on the left. It would be nice to have
a coalition of Americans who disagree about many other subjects — who span conservative and progressive, internationalist and isolationist, religious and secular, business-friendly and labor-friendly, pro-immigration and restrictionist, laissez-faire and pro-government, pro-life and pro-choice — yet who believe that these subjects must be decided through democratic debate and constitutional processes rather than the dictates of a single man.But that doesn't mean that every person in the coalition has to avoid pronouncements or tactics that some other members of the coalition reject. Everyone doesn't have to agree on everything. If you don't like what one individual or group is doing to oppose Trump, be an adult and simply decline to participate, while continuing to endorse the words and deeds you agree with.
I'll give a real-world example from right now: In March and April, I attended several demonstrations at the Tesla dealership in downtown Manhattan. At two of these demonstrations, some attendees entered the dealership and sat in until they were arrested. The rest of us stayed outside. We marched and chanted and waved signs. We kept it legal.
But we also didn't say, "You arrestees are preventing us from building the broadest possible anti-Elon Musk coalition! We must reject your actions categorically!" Why would we do that?
Most anti-Musk protesters haven't vandalized a car or burned a charging station. Personally I wouldn't, and I think if you do something like that, you should expect legal consequences. (The consequences ought to conform to existing laws, of course -- none of this We don't like you, so we're sending you to an overseas torture prison without a trial brutality that our president and attorney general seem to favor.) But I can't help wondering if the vandals have been the most effective anti-Musk activists.
Whatever is happening, it's clear that we helped turn public opinion against Musk without scrubbing the anti-Musk movement to make it safe for moderates and conservatives. As a result of what we've done, I'm sure many Americans think, I'm against vandalism, but Elon really is an asshole, and what right does he have to all my personal data?
It seems to me that the Times ed board is tone-policing the anti-Trump movement for a couple of reasons.
First, it wants to blame progressives for the establishment's failure to constrain Trump. A year from now, if there are tanks in the streets, the ed board will say it's the fault of those dirty hippies "who conflate conservative policies with unconstitutional policies." No blame will accrue to the establishmentarians themselves.
And second, if Trump's opponents succeed, the ed board doesn't want the next government to be in a position to give Americans truly progressive change. Heaven forbid we should have a successful anti-Trump movement and then demand a reversal of ever-widening economic inequality. Heaven forbid we tax the rich.
The Times ed board wants Trump to be thwarted, but only if he's thwarted in a way that restores the pre-Trump status quo. The ed board wants the broadest possible coalition, but maybe not so broad as to include Trump's fiercest critics, and if they insist on participating, they should have as little power as possible.