Botswana Guardian

Trump administra­tion acting ‘ more akin to a dictatorsh­ip’

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President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is taking on the characteri­stics of a tottering regime -- with its loyalty tests, destabiliz­ing attacks on the military chain of command, a deepening bunker mentality and increasing­ly delusional claims of political victory.

In response, a visibly confident President- elect Joe Biden is going out of his way to project calm amid the deepening chaos, even as Trump and senior Republican­s still refuse to acknowledg­e the President’s defeat in a stunning break with America’s democratic traditions.

Biden is taking calls with leaders of the country’s top allies and appearing on camera, which reflects the inevitabil­ity of his ascent to power. Meanwhile the President is staying behind closed doors, tweeting in wild block capital letters and unleashing a purge of the Pentagon’s civilian leadership in what one current defense official called “dictator moves.” And William Cohen, former Secretary of Defense and Republican senator, told CNN’s Don Lemon the administra­tion’s conduct is “more akin to a dictatorsh­ip than a democracy.”

The President- elect is reassuring the American people with a composure granted by an election win that Trump’s threadbare legal cases baselessly alleging massive voter fraud have little chance of overturnin­g the will of the voters.

The President- elect on Tuesday consciousl­y avoided escalating a confrontat­ion with Trump, who is withholdin­g the access and funding that incoming presidents normally rely on to stand up their administra­tions. But while Trump will remain President until January 20, an unmistakab­le symbolic transfer of authority is taking place despite Trump’s efforts to deny his successor legitimacy.

“We don’t see anything that’s slowing us down, quite frankly,” Biden said. The President- elect has already crossed the necessary threshold of 270 electoral votes, according to projection­s from CNN and other major news outlets and has a chance of matching Trump’s 2016 total of 306 electoral votes given his leads in Georgia and Arizona.

And more false accusation­s and conspiracy theories touted by Trump supporters to claim electoral fraud are dissolving, a day after Attorney General William Barr stepped into the political fray to advise prosecutor­s to probe major fraud.

The Department of Homeland Security meanwhile pushed back on rumors that ballots were cast on behalf of dead people.

But the Trump team only dug itself deeper into a bizarre parallel universe -- one where the President has already secured a second term -- consistent with the embrace of misinforma­tion and alternativ­e facts that has characteri­zed the last four years.

The administra­tion’s defiance took an even more ridiculous twist on Tuesday when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo showed his loyalty to a leader who shows no sign of working on key issues -- including a pandemic that has now landed more Americans in hospitals than ever before.

“There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administra­tion,” Pompeo said. Asked whether Trump’s refusal to concede undercut traditiona­l US critiques of corrupt elections abroad, Pompeo rounded on a reporter: “That’s ridiculous. And you know it’s ridiculous, and you asked it because it’s ridiculous.” As recently as Monday, Pompeo issued a statement warning of electoral issues in Myanmar, which was long ruled by the military and has endured a difficult transition to semi- democracy where dissidents once looked at the US as a lodestar. In Wilmington, Delaware, the Presidente­lect pointedly refused to pour fuel on the fire, dismissing the idea that he needed to take legal action to release transition funds and making clear that he was confident that the process of assuming power would eventually work itself out.

He described Trump’s behavior since Election Day as “an embarrassm­ent” and after saying he was seeking to be tactful added: “It will not help the President’s legacy.” Asked whether Republican­s would ever accept his victory, he said, “They will, they will,” and he suggested with a half- smile that GOP senators were “mildly intimidate­d” by the President. Biden, who once had a reputation as a windy public speaker, is showing a new persona to the American people. He noticeably chose his words carefully on Tuesday, putting on a show of calm, as he experience­s the transforma­tion that often comes over victorious candidates as they begin to assume the weight of the presidency after winning elections.

Pentagon purge Trump by contrast is tarnishing the instrument­s of American democracy by refusing to concede and leaving the country more vulnerable with revenge firings that threaten to weaken critical national security agencies. After Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who had put loyalty to the Constituti­on ahead of his duty to the President, three other senior Pentagon officials have been fired or resigned. They include the department’s top policy official, James Anderson, who resigned and is being replaced by retired Brigadier General Anthony Tata, whose nomination for the post earlier this summer foundered after CNN’s KFile reported his numerous past Islamophob­ic and offensive remarks. Sources told Barbara Starr and CNN’s Pentagon team that the dismissals might be motivated by pushback from Esper and his team against a withdrawal from Afghanista­n that would be carried out before the required conditions on the ground were met, and other pending security issues.“This is scary, it’s very unsettling,” one defense official told CNN. “These are dictator moves.” Cohen, former Secretary of Defense and Republican senator, too called out the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to acknowledg­e Biden’s win Tuesday night, saying “the way they are conducting themselves is more akin to a dictatorsh­ip than a democracy.”“I think that the State Department has been politicize­d, just like the DoD has tried to be politicize­d, and what we’ve done to undermine the intelligen­ce community and other agencies, I think is consistent with what has been taking place for four years now,” he said Tuesday. A disputed transfer of power could offer US adversarie­s an opening, especially if there is a belief abroad that there is disarray in the national security infrastruc­ture. Trump may next turn his ire on CIA Director Gina Haspel and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, CNN’s Jake Tapper has reported. Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t said on CNN Internatio­nal Tuesday that he feared the US was entering a dangerous period.

“I think ( Trump) is going to be uniquely distracted from world events and national security,” Murphy said. Former national security adviser John Bolton told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that Pompeo’s comments on a Trump transition were “delusional.”“I think he has eviscerate­d his credibilit­y internatio­nally because I think there are very few people even in the US government who believe that is the case,” Bolton said.

Trump’s legal battle faces massive odds Despite Trump’s claims that his second term is being stolen from him, the President’s legal claim has so far made no headway in its efforts to claim massive fraud. The gambit looks increasing­ly like a political exercise as Trump struggles to come to terms with his defeat while Republican senators scared of the President’s political base refuse to cross him, especially with two Georgia runoff elections scheduled for January that will decide control of their chamber. Trump’s already minuscule opportunit­y to change the course of the election is diminishin­g by the day. Biden is now more than 46,000 votes ahead in Pennsylvan­ia, is up by 12,000 in Georgia and has a lead of 14,000 ballots in Arizona. It is not clear whether there are sufficient remaining votes left in the Grand Canyon state for the President to overtake the Presidente­lect. As the Trump campaign filed a new long- shot lawsuit in Michigan, which Biden won by nearly than 150,000 votes, its communicat­ions director Tim Murtaugh said, “We do believe that ultimately President Trump will be declared the winner of this election.”

But Benjamin Ginsberg, a veteran Republican election lawyer, said that the Trump campaign “was a long way from nowhere” in its quest to overturn the outcome of the election.

“To win cases, they have to put enough results into play to change the outcome of the election in individual states and in none of the suits they have filed around the country are they anywhere close to doing that in any state,” Ginsberg said on CNN’s “The Situation Room.”

Still, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell dug in Tuesday on his insistence that Trump was within his rights to pursue his complaints.“I think we ought to quit all the hand- wringing and not act like this is extraordin­ary,” the newly reelected Kentucky Republican said. “We’re going to get through this period and we’ll swear in the winner on January the 20th, 2021, just like we have every four years since 1793.” While many observers believe McConnell is playing a long political game -- with the Georgia runoffs and the 2022 midterm congressio­nal elections in mind -- the silence of Republican senators is emboldenin­g Trump’s intransige­nce. The world has already moved onBut while GOP lawmakers aren’t willing to break with the President, many world leaders are moving to embrace Biden -- including a number of whom who saw themselves as ideologica­l counterpar­ts of the President. Biden’s campaign released statements on the President- elect’s calls with the leaders of France, Germany and Ireland. Biden also spoke to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose populist leanings made him a good fit with Trump. Johnson promised to work with Biden in a post- Covid- 19 era.

Even Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who bonded with Trump over their common strongman tendencies, issued a public message congratula­ting Biden on his “election success.” And Saudi King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman -- who has a close and controvers­ial relationsh­ip with Trump and his son- in- law Jared Kushner -- sent Biden a cable in which they conveyed congratula­tions on “His Excellency’s victory in the presidenti­al elections.”

Biden said he had a simple message for all the world leaders: “I am letting them know America is back.”

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