Dayton Daily News

Dems need to look beyond Trump with big, bold vision

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Donald Trump says the midterm elections are a “referendum about me.” Of course they are. Everything is about him.

Anyone who still believes the political divide runs between Republican­s and Democrats hasn’t been paying attention. There’s no longer a Republican Party. The GOP is now just proTrump.

Meanwhile, Trump is doing all he can to make the Democratic Party the antiTrump Party. “Democrats,” he declares, are “too dangerous to govern.” They’re “an angry left-wing mob,” leading an “assault on our country.”

Never before has a president of the United States been so determined not to be president of all Americans. He’s president of his supporters.

Tyrants create cults of personalit­y. Trump is beyond that. He equates America with himself, and disloyalty to him with insufficie­nt patriotism.

When everything and everyone is either proor anti-Trump, there’s no room for neutral expertise, profession­al norms, good public policy or the rule of law.

Trump calls military generals “my” generals. He expects the FBI director, the attorney general and the Justice Department to be “his.” He proudly points to “his” judges and justices.

Republican members of Congress are part of “his” government — unless, like Jeff Flake and the late John McCain, they’re not.

He believes the nation’s press is either for him or against him.

The Trumpifica­tion of America hardly ends if Democrats take over the House or possibly the Senate. Trump will blame them for everything that goes wrong. He’ll make up problems they’re supposedly responsibl­e for. He’ll ridicule them and call them traitors.

Naturally, Democrats will want to defend themselves. Naturally, they’ll also want to attack Trump.

If they flip the House, they’ll use their subpoena power to dredge up whatever dirt on him they can find — summoning his tax records, special counsel Robert Mueller, Mueller’s investigat­ive findings — and perhaps even beginning impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Trump and his Republican enablers will fight back, condemning Democrats for weakening America, engaging in fishing expedition­s and witch hunts. Trump and his lawyers will tie up the subpoenas in court, claiming executive privilege.

Op-ed writers, editorial boards and pundits will argue over the best ways for Democrats to proceed against Trump — going low or going high. Pollsters will tell us which Democratic candidate is seen as being most effective against him.

But all of this is a giant trap. It accepts and enforces Trump’s worldview that nothing is more important than Donald Trump, that he embodies all that’s good or bad about America, and that our most significan­t choice is to be for him or against him.

It allows Trump to continue to dominate the news and occupy the center of the nation’s attention.

We’d talk about nothing else for two years.

We won’t be aspiring to be more than we were before Trump. We’ll debate and dissect the damage done since Trump.

Of course Democrats have to fight him. But they also have to lift America beyond him.

The central question shouldn’t be whether we’re pro- or anti-Trump, or whether we go low or high in fighting him. The question is where America should go — and what we, together, can become.

 ??  ?? Robert ReichHe is former U.S. secretary of labor and is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley.
Robert ReichHe is former U.S. secretary of labor and is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley.

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