Las Vegas Review-Journal

Voters should use ballots to control Trump

- Eugene Robinson

Grit your teeth. Persevere. Just a few more days and this awful, rotten, no-good, ridiculous, rancorous, sordid, disgracefu­l year in the civic life of our nation will be over. Here’s hoping that we all — particular­ly special counsel Robert Mueller — have a better 2018.

Many of us began 2017 with the consoling thought that the Donald Trump presidency couldn’t possibly be as bad as we feared. It turned out to be worse.

Did you ever think you would hear a president use the words “very fine people” to describe participan­ts in a torchlit rally organized by white supremacis­ts, neo-nazis and the Ku Klux Klan? Did you ever think you would hear a U.S. ambassador to the United Nations thuggishly threaten that she would be “taking names” of countries that did not vote on a General Assembly resolution the way she wanted? Did you ever think the government of the world’s biggest military and economic power would reject not just science but empiricism itself, preferring to use made-up “alternativ­e facts” as the basis for major decisions?

We knew Trump was narcissist­ic and shallow, but early on it was possible to at least hope he was self-aware enough to understand the weight that now rested on his shoulders, and perhaps grow into the job. He did not. If anything, he has gotten worse.

By all accounts, the president spends hours each day watching cable news, buoyed by the shows that blindly support him — “Fox & Friends,” “Hannity,” a few others on Fox News — and enraged by those that seek to hold him accountabl­e. His aides have had to shorten and dumb-down his daily briefings on national security in an attempt to get him to pay attention. Members of his Cabinet try to outdo one another in lavishing him with flowery, obsequious praise that would embarrass the Sun King.

Trump and his enablers have waged a war against truth in an attempt to delegitimi­ze any and all critical voices. He wields the epithet “fake news” as a cudgel against inconvenie­nt facts and those who report them. Can a democracy function without a commonly accepted chronicle of events and a commonly acknowledg­ed encycloped­ia of knowledge? We are conducting a dangerous experiment to find out.

To understand how deviant the Trump administra­tion is, consider this: Since its founding, the nation has treasured civilian control of the military as a restraint on adventuris­m. Now we must rely on three generals — Trump’s chief of staff, his national security adviser and his secretary of defense — to keep this rash and erratic president from careening off the rails.

The president’s Republican allies in Congress, who have the power to restrain an out-of-control executive, have rolled over in passive submission. Many see clearly Trump’s unfitness but continue to support him because they fear the wrath of his hardcore base and see the chance to enact a conservati­ve agenda. History will remember this craven opportunis­m and judge it harshly.

I haven’t even mentioned Trump’s nepotism — installing his daughter and son-in-law as high-ranking advisers, with portfolios they are in no way qualified to handle — or his inability to staff the executive branch with the best-and-brightest types who customaril­y serve. The Trump administra­tion is not only transgress­ive, it is also mediocre.

The year has been terribly depressing — but not paralyzing. Let’s end on a more positive note.

The day after Trump’s inaugurati­on, a much larger crowd descended on Washington for the Women’s March, an immense show of resistance. That passion might eventually have faded away, but all evidence suggests it has not. If anything, it seems to have intensifie­d.

In November, Democrat Ralph Northam won the governor’s race in Virginia, a purple state, by a surprising­ly big nine-point margin. His coattails were long enough to elect so many Democrats to the state House of Delegates that control of the chamber is still undecided pending recounts. And then Democrat Doug Jones defeated Republican Roy Moore in a special election for a U.S. Senate seat — in Alabama, one of the most Republican states in the nation.

These races were not about D’s versus R’s. They were about sanity versus insanity, reason versus chaos. They were about Trump, and he lost.

So Godspeed to the Mueller investigat­ion, but let him worry about that. The rest of us — Democrats, independen­ts, patriotic Republican­s — should work toward the November election. Our duty is to elect a Congress that will bring this runaway train under control.

Eugene Robinson is a columnist for The Washington Post.

The passion that was on display during the Women’s March might eventually have faded away, but all evidence suggests it has not.

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