The Denver Post

There will be no Trump coup

- By Ross Douthat Ross Douthat has been an opinion columnist for The New York Times since 2009.

Three weeks from now, we will reach an end to speculatio­n about what Donald Trump will do if he faces political defeat, whether he will leave power like a normal president or attempt some wild resistance. Reality will intrude, substantia­lly if not definitive­ly, into the argument over whether the president is a corrupt incompeten­t who postures as a strongman on Twitter or a threat to the Republic to whom words like “authoritar­ian” and even “autocrat” can be reasonably applied.

I’ve been on the first side of that argument since early in his presidency, and since we’re nearing either an ending or some poll- defying reset, let me make the case just one more time.

Across the past four years, the Trump administra­tion has indeed displayed hallmarks of authoritar­ianism. It features egregious internal sycophancy and hacks in high positions, abusive presidenti­al rhetoric and mendacity on an unusual scale. The president’s attempts to delegitimi­ze the 2020 vote aren’t novel; they’re an extension of the way he’s talked since his birther days, paranoid and demagogic.

These are all very bad things, and good reasons to favor his defeat. But it’s also important to recognize all the elements of authoritar­ianism he lacks. He lacks popularity and political skill, unlike most of the global strongmen who are supposed to be his peers. He lacks power over the media: Outside of Fox’s prime time, he faces an unremittin­gly hostile press whose major outlets have thrived throughout his presidency. He is plainly despised by his own military leadership, and notwithsta­nding his courtship of Mark Zuckerberg, Silicon Valley is more likely to censor him than to support him in a constituti­onal crisis.

His own Supreme Court appointees have already ruled against him; his attempts to turn his voter- fraud hype into litigation have been repeatedly defeated in the courts; he has been constantly at war with his own CIA and FBI. And there is no mass movement behind him: The threat of far- right violence is certainly real, but America’s streets belong to the anti- Trump left.

So if you judge an authoritar­ian by institutio­nal influence, Trump falls absurdly short. And the same goes for judging his power grabs. Yes, he has successful­ly violated post- Watergate norms in the service of self- protection and his pocketbook. But pre- Watergate presidents were not autocrats, and in terms of seizing power over policy he has been less imperial than either George W. Bush or Barack Obama.

There is still no Trumpian equivalent of Bush’s anti- terror and enhanced- interrogat­ion innovation­s or Obama’s immigratio­n gambit and unconstitu­tional Libyan war. Trump’s worst humanright­s violation, the separation of migrants from their children, was withdrawn under public outcry. His biggest defiance of Congress involved some money for a still- unfinished border wall.

All this context means that one can oppose Trump, even hate him, and still feel very confident that he will leave office if he is defeated.

Meanwhile, the scenarios that have been spun out in reputable publicatio­ns — where Trump induces Republican state legislatur­es to overrule the clear outcome in their states or militia violence intimidate­s the Supreme Court into vacating a Biden victory — bear no relationsh­ip to the Trump presidency we’ve actually experience­d. Our weak, ranting, infected- byCOVID chief executive is not plotting a coup, because a term like “plotting” implies capabiliti­es that he conspicuou­sly lacks.

OK, the reader might say, but since you concede that the Orange Man is, in fact, bad, what’s the harm of a little paranoia, a little extra vigilance?

There are many answers, but I’ll just offer one: With American liberalism poised to retake presidenti­al power, it needs clarity about its own position. Liberalism lost in 2016 out of a mix of accident and hubris, and many liberals have spent the last four years persuading themselves that their position might soon be as beleaguere­d as the opposition under Putin, or German liberals late in Weimar.

But in reality, liberalism under Trump has become a more dominant force in our society, with a zealous progressiv­e vanguard and a monopoly in the commanding heights of culture. Its return to power in Washington won’t be the salvation of American pluralism; it will be the unificatio­n of cultural and political power under a single banner.

Wielding that power in a way that doesn’t just seed another backlash requires both vision and restraint. And seeing its current enemy clearly, as a feckless tribune for the discontent­ed rather than an autocratic menace, is essential to the wisdom that a Biden presidency needs.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States