Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

How to tackle monstrous predicamen­t Trump left

- Robert B. Reich Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

This week’s Senate impeachmen­t trial is unlikely to convict Donald Trump of inciting sedition against the United States. At least 17 Republican senators are needed for conviction, but only five have signaled they’ll go along.

Why won’t Republican senators convict him? After all, it’s an open-and-shut case. As summarized in the brief submitted by House impeachmen­t managers, Trump spent months before the election telling his followers that the only way he could lose was through “a dangerous, wide-ranging conspiracy against them that threatened America itself.”

Immediatel­y after the election, he lied that he had won by a “landslide” and later urged his followers to stop the counting of electoral votes by making plans to “fight like hell” and “fight to the death” against this “act of war” perpetrate­d by “radical left Democrats” and the “weak and ineffectiv­e RINO section of the Republican Party.”

If this isn’t an impeachabl­e offense, it’s hard to imagine what is. But Republican senators won’t convict Trump because they’re answerable to Republican voters, and Republican voters continue to believe Trump’s big lie. A shocking 3 out of 4 Republican voters don’t think Joe Biden won legitimate­ly. About 45 percent even support the storming of the Capitol.

The crux of the problem is that Americans now occupy two separate worlds — a fact-based pro-democracy world and a Trump-based authoritar­ian one. Trump spent the last four years seducing voters into his world, turning the GOP from a political party into a grotesque projection of his pathologic­al narcissism.

America must now deal with the monstrous predicamen­t he left behind: One of the nation’s two major political parties has abandoned reality and democracy.

What to do? Four things.

First, prevent Trump from running for president in 2024. The mere possibilit­y energizes his followers.

An impeachmen­t conviction is not the only way to prevent him. Under Section

3 of the 14th Amendment to the Constituti­on, anyone who has taken an oath to protect the Constituti­on is barred from holding public office if they “have engaged in insurrecti­on” against the United States. As constituti­onal expert and former Yale Law School professor Bruce Ackerman has noted, a majority vote that Trump engaged in insurrecti­on against the United States is sufficient to trigger this clause.

Second, give Republican­s and independen­ts every incentive to abandon the Trump cult.

The white working-class voters without college degrees who now comprise a large portion of the Trump cult need good jobs and better futures. They should not have to depend on Trump’s fact-free fanaticism in order to feel visible and respected.

A jobs program on the scale necessary to bring many of them around will be expensive but worth the cost, especially when democracy hangs in the balance.

Third, disempower the giant media empires that amplified Trump’s lies for four years — Facebook, Twitter and Fox News and its imitators. The goal is not to “cancel” the political right but to refocus public deliberati­on on facts, truth and logic.

The solution is antitrust enforcemen­t and stricter regulation of social media, accompanie­d by countervai­ling financial pressure. Consumers should boycott products advertised on these lie factories, and advertiser­s should shun them. Large tech platforms should lose legal immunity for violence-inciting content. Broadcaste­rs such as Fox News and Newsmax should be liable for knowingly spreading lies.

Fourth, safeguard the democratic form of government. This requires barring corporatio­ns and the very wealthy from buying off politician­s, ending “dark money” political groups that don’t disclose their donors, defending the right to vote and ensuring more citizens are heard, not fewer.

The end of Trump’s presidency has given the nation a reprieve. Unless America uses it to end Trumpism’s hold over tens of millions of Americans, that reprieve may be temporary. Thankfully, Joe Biden appears to understand this.

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