Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

A reminder of who we can be

- Susan Estrich Susan Estrich is syndicated by Creators Syndicate.

The president’s former campaign chairman stands convicted of eight felony counts.

The president’s formal personal lawyer is pleading guilty and cooperatin­g.

No one is above the law but the president. And with his help, all his friends are, too. What does that sound like? Not the rule of law.

This week, his top advisers are taking to the press to try to persuade him not to pardon his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, whose conviction­s to date don’t even relate the management of the campaign. Other presidents had pardon attorneys who assured, or tried to, that this absolute power was used fairly. Sanely. In recognitio­n of changes in a person or in the law. Not on the recommenda­tion of Kim Kardashian. Or her liberal counterpar­t.

All the smart Republican­s on the planet are out there begging him not to sink the party, and at the same time, they acknowledg­e that actually, they don’t expect him to listen to them. This massive, uniform campaign to try to stop him is their Hail Mary pass. He listens to no one. He humiliates callously, starting with his far classier wife.

And former Sen. John McCain, respected by everyone but him? Of all Trump’s tasteless, disgracefu­l, divisive cuts, his reported rejection of his wife’s advice that he say something more than what you say when gang members get shot is the ugliest by far.

No one is particular­ly outraged. No one is even surprised.

Half of us expect no better, and the rest expect no worse.

This administra­tion is dangerousl­y transparen­t. The president does not censor himself. No one has ever seen such leaks, the last desperate hope of a staff whose loyalty is tested on a moment-by-moment basis. I don’t think anyone has any illusions about who this man is.

A president who cares about his party wouldn’t force his colleagues to face disaster so he could show off his absolute power. But he doesn’t care about his wife, doesn’t care about NATO or immigrant children, and doesn’t care about the rule of law.

Why should he care about a bunch of folks who are celebratin­g the guy who stopped him from taking health insurance away from millions of Americans, with nothing to replace it?

What have you done for me lately? I don’t know too many people who haven’t already taken sides and dug in. The 2020 election, the one that he does care about, will be decided by some combinatio­n of the people who aren’t paying attention and the people who change their minds — people who treat politics like I do football until the Super Bowl.

The problem is not just that a man who doesn’t respect the presidency is holding that office. He is changing us, changing our expectatio­ns of civility and bipartisan­ship, of courage and patriotism, of democracy in the daylight. And it happens so often, so routinely, that the best we can do is stand up for the attorney general when he — radically — stands up for the rule of law.

We may all be working, but our souls are another matter. Let the death of an American hero remind us of who we can be.

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