Boston Herald

Left can’t handle the idea of a Trump victory

- By Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is editor in chief of the National Review

If 2024 is set to be tumultuous and unpredicta­ble, just wait until 2025 if Donald Trump wins the presidency again later his year.

His adversarie­s don’t have a history of accepting his victories with equanimity. Trump’s unexpected victory in 2016 launched conspiracy theories about how Russia had helped him win; catalyzed a yearslong law-enforcemen­t investigat­ion into him and his campaign based on those theories; and set off protests in the streets.

Trump’s opponents are sincerely, and to some extent, understand­ably alarmed by his conduct after the 2020 election, and how he’s branded his political comeback as a revenge tour.

For most of them, though, saving democracy doesn’t mean upholding the rules no matter what and letting the voters decide the election and the fate of the next president. No, it means blocking Donald Trump by any means necessary, regardless of the consequenc­es for the rule of law, democratic politics or faith in our system of government.

In this view, democracy has only one legitimate outcome, and it doesn’t involve Donald Trump back at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

It’s hard to imagine what’s more extreme than one side in our politics indicting its leading opponent, creating the real prospect of jailing him in the months prior to an election, and excluding him from the ballot in select states.

Yet, if Trump wins, we have to assume that this is only a taste of things to come. It’s not as though his enemies are going to conclude that Trump was an intolerabl­e threat as a candidate, but once he’s been elected president again, the voters have spoken and everyone should revert to politics as usual.

The Washington Post ran a much-discussed essay by Robert Kagan, arguing that Trump has brought the U.S. to the brink of dictatorsh­ip. If he returns to power, it would mean “the price of opposing him becomes persecutio­n, the loss of property and possibly the loss of freedom.”

This dire view depends on every institutio­nal bulwark of America’s system — from the courts to the military to public opinion — surrenderi­ng to a one-term president who, if history is any guide, will get rebuked in the midterms and become a lame duck by his third year in office.

But if tyranny is where you think we are headed, what’s the appropriat­e response? Running anti-Trump super pac ads this year? Canvassing for President Biden? Going on CNN panels to sound very concerned?

And if Trump emerges victorious, and the alleged dictatorsh­ip is underway in earnest?

Certainly, the reaction will make the pro-Hamas protests that have roiled college campuses and disrupted transporta­tion nodes around the country look small-scale by comparison. At least some portion of the left will convince itself that only a color revolution can save the country.

Prior to the 2016 TrumpClint­on contest, one school of Trump supporters posited that it was the “Flight 93 election” — possibly the last chance to save the country. Now, that’s the way the left feels, except Trump won his Flight 93 election, and Joe Biden could well lose his.

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