Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

A two-year prediction based on ‘Law of the Pendulum’

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Good news: In two years, we’ll have a new president. Bad news: If we make it that long.

My “good” prediction is based on the Law of the Pendulum. Enough Americans, including most independen­t voters, will be so ready to shed Donald Trump and his little shop of horrors that the 2018 midterm elections are all but certain to be a landslide — no make that a mudslide — sweep of the House and Senate. If Republican­s took both houses in a groundswel­l of the people’s rejection of Obamacare, Democrats will take them back in a tsunami of protest.

Once ensconced, it would take a Democratic majority approximat­ely 30 seconds to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s selecting from an accumulati­ng pile of lies, overreach and just plain sloppiness. That is, assuming Trump hasn’t already been shown the exit.

Or that he hasn’t declared martial law (all those anarchists, you know) and effectivel­y silenced dissent. We’re already well on our way to the latter via Trump’s incessant attacks on the media — “the most dishonest people in the world” — and press secretary Sean Spicer’s rabid-chihuahua, daily press briefings. (Note to Sean: Whatever he’s promised you, it’s not worth becoming Melissa McCarthy’s punching bag. But really, don’t stop.)

With luck, and Cabinet-level courage not much in evidence, there’s a chance we won’t have to wait two long years, during which, let’s face it, anything could happen. Thus far, Trump and his henchmen have conducted a full frontal assault on civil liberties, open government and religious freedom, as well as instigatin­g or condoning a cascade of ethics violations ranging from the serious (business conflicts of interest) to the absurd (attacking a department store for dropping his daughter’s fashion line). And, no, it’s not just a father defending his daughter. It’s the president of the United States bullying a particular business and, more generally, making a public case against free enterprise.

To an objective observer, it would seem impossible to defend the perilous absurditie­s emanating from the White House and from at least one executive agency, the USDA, which recently scrubbed animal abuse reports from its website, leaving puppies, kittens, horses and others to fend for themselves.

In a hopeful note, a few Republican­s are speaking out, but the list is short.

GOP Rep. Jason Chaffetz recently got a taste of what’s ahead for Republican incumbents. Facing an unruly crowd at a town hall meeting in Utah, the House Oversight Committee chair was booed nearly every time he mentioned Trump.

While we wait for it to someday find the nation’s center, where so many wait impatientl­y, it seems clear that the president, who swore an oath to defend the U.S. Constituti­on, has never read it. Nor, apparently, has he ever even watched a Hollywood rendering of the presidency.

A single episode of “The West Wing” would have taught Trump more about his new job than he currently seems to know — or care.

Far more compelling than keeping his promise to act presidenti­al is keeping campaign promises against reason, signing poorly conceived executive orders, bashing the judicial and legislativ­e branches, and tweeting his spleen to a wondering and worrying world.

Trump’s childish and petulant manner, meanwhile, further reinforces long-held concerns that this man can’t be trusted to lead a dog-and-pony act, much less the nation.

Most worrisome is how long Trump can tolerate the protests, criticisms, humiliatio­ns, rebuttals and defeats — and what price he’ll try to exact from those who refused to look away.

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