Dayton Daily News

Voters must salvage checks and balances on President

- Robert Reich He is former U.S. Secretary of Labor and is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley.

Anyone still unsure of how (or even whether) they’ll vote in the midterm elections should consider this: All three branches of government are now under the control of one party, and that party is under the control of Donald J. Trump.

With the addition of Brett Kavanaugh, the Supreme Court is as firmly Republican as are the House and Senate.

Kavanaugh was revealed as a fierce partisan. He is not only the legal adviser who helped Kenneth Starr prosecute Bill Clinton and almost certainly guided George W. Bush’s policy on the torture of detainees, but also a nominee who believes “leftists” and Clinton sympathize­rs are out to get him.

He joins four other Republican-appointed jurists who are just as partisan. Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and John Roberts have never wavered from Republican orthodoxy. Neil Gorsuch, although without much of a track record on the Supreme Court to date, was a predictabl­e conservati­ve Republican vote on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Even under normal circumstan­ces, when all three branches are under the control of the same party we get a lopsided government that doesn’t respond to the values of a large portion of the electorate.

But these are not normal circumstan­ces. Donald Trump is president.

Trump doesn’t even pretend to be the president of all the people. As he repeatedly makes clear in rallies and tweets, he is president of his “base.”

And his demagoguer­y is by now unconstrai­ned in the White House. Having fired the few “adults” in his Cabinet, Trump is now on the loose (but for a few advisers who reportedly are trying to protect the nation from him).

All this would be bad enough even if the two other branches of government behaved as the framers of the Constituti­on expected — as checks and balances on a president. But under Republican leadership, they refuse to play this role.

House and Senate Republican­s have morphed into Trump sycophants and toadies. The few who have dared call him on his outrages aren’t running for re-election.

Some have distanced themselves from a few of his most incendiary tweets or racist rantings, but most are obedient lapdogs on everything else — including Trump’s reluctance to protect the integrity of our election system, his moves to prevent an investigat­ion into Russian meddling, his trade wars, his attacks on NATO and the leaders of other democracie­s, his swooning over dictators, his cruelty toward asylum-seekers, and, in the Senate, his Supreme Court nominees.

Now that Kavanaugh is on the Supreme Court, you can forget about the court constraini­ng Trump.

So how are checks and balances, a constituti­onal imperative, to be salvaged? The only remedy is for voters to flip the House or Senate, or both, on Nov. 6.

The likelihood of this happening is higher now, with Kavanaugh joining the Supreme Court and Trump so manifestly unchecked.

If cynicism wins the day, Trump and those who would delight in the demise of American democracy will get everything they want. They will have broken America.

For the sake of the values we hold dear — and the sake of the institutio­ns of our democracy that our forbearers relied on and our descendant­s will need — this cannot be allowed.

It is time to place a check on this most unbalanced of presidents and vote.

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