Albuquerque Journal

U.S. closer to autocracy as GOP looks on

- E. J. DIONNE Columnist Email: ejdionne@washpost.com.

The news is being reported on split screen as if the one big story in Washington is disconnect­ed from the other. But President Trump’s lawless threats against Attorney General Jeff Sessions have a lot in common with the Senate’s reckless approach to the health coverage of tens of millions of Americans.

On both ends of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, we are witnessing a collapse of the norms of governing, constant violations of our legitimate expectatio­ns of political leaders, and the mutation of the normal conflicts of democracy into a form of warfare that demands unconditio­nal surrender.

Trump’s latest perverse miracle is he has progressiv­es — along with everyone else who cares about the rule of law — rooting for Sessions. The attorney general is as wrong as ever on voter suppressio­n, civil rights enforcemen­t and immigratio­n. But Sessions did one very important thing: He obeyed the law. When it was clear he would have obvious conflicts of interest in the investigat­ion of Russian meddling in our election and its possible links to the Trump campaign, Sessions recused himself as he was required to do.

Trump’s attacks on Sessions for that recusal are thus a naked admission he wants the nation’s top lawyer to act illegally if that’s what it takes to protect him and his family. Equally inappropri­ate are his diktats from the Oval Office calling on Sessions to investigat­e Hillary Clinton and those terrible “leakers” who are more properly seen as whistleblo­wers against Trump’s abuses.

Our country is now as close to crossing the line from democracy to autocracy as it has been in our lifetimes. Trump’s ignorant, self-involved contempt for his duty under Article II, Section 3 of the Constituti­on to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed” ought to inspire patriots of every ideologica­l dispositio­n to fearless defiance.

But where are the leaders of the Republican Party in the face of the dangers Trump poses? They’re trying to sneak through a health care bill by violating every reasonable standard citizens should impose on public servants dealing with legislatio­n that affects more than one-sixth of our economy. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan have little time for worrying about the Constituti­on as they do Trump’s bidding on health care.

Let it be said two Republican senators will forever deserve our gratitude for insisting a complicate­d health care law should be approached the way Obamacare was enacted: through lengthy hearings, robust debate and real input from the opposition party. In voting upfront to try to stop the process, Sens. Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski demonstrat­ed a moral and political toughness that eluded other GOP colleagues who had expressed doubts about this charade, but fell into line behind their leaders.

The most insidious aspect of McConnell’s strategy is he is shooting to pass something, anything, that would continue to save Republican­s from having a transparen­t give-and-take on measures that could ultimately strip health insurance from 20 million Americans or more. Passing even the most meager of health bills this week would move the covert coverage-demolition effort to a conference committee with the House.

The Senate’s unseemly marathon thus seems likely to end with a push for a “skinny repeal” bill that would eliminate the Affordable Care Act’s individual and employer mandates, and its medical device tax. But no one should be deluded: A skinny repeal vote is for emaciated democracy.

A wholesale defeat for what might be described as the Trump-McConnell-Ryan Unhealthy America Act of 2017 is essential for those being served by the ACA, but also for our politics.

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