The Guardian (USA)

Oath and Honor review: Liz Cheney spells out the threat from Trump

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Donald Trump stands ready to knife US democracy. A year ago, he called for terminatin­g the constituti­on. He has since announced that if re-elected, he wants to weaponize federal law enforcemen­t against his political enemies. He has suggested that Gen Mark Milley, former chairman of the joint chiefs, be executed for fulfilling his duty.

This is a man who reportedly kept a bound copy of Hitler’s speeches at his bedside, very nearly managed to overturn an election, and certainly basked in the mayhem of the January 6 insurrecti­on. He said Mike Pence, his vicepresid­ent who ultimately stood against him, “deserved” to be hanged for so doing.

This week, Trump said he would be a dictator “on day one” of a second term. All bets are off. Take him literally and seriously.

The New York Times and the Atlantic report that Trump aims to make the executive branch his fiefdom, loyalty the primary if not only test. If he returns to power, the independen­ce of the justice department and FBI will be things of the past. He is the “most dangerous man ever to inhabit the Oval Office”, Liz Cheney writes in her memoir.

“This is the story of when American democracy began to unravel,” the former congresswo­man adds. “It is the story of the men and women who fought to save it, and of the enablers and collaborat­ors whose actions ensured the threat would grow and metastasiz­e.”

Cheney, formerly the No 3 House Republican, was vice-chair of the House

January 6 committee. She has witnessed power wielded – not always wisely. Dick Cheney, her father, was George W Bush’s vice-president and pushed the Iraq war. Before that he was secretary of defense to Bush’s father and, like his daughter, represente­d Wyoming in the House.

Liz Cheney delivers a frightenin­g narrative. Her recollecti­ons are firsthand, her prose dry, terse and informed. On January 6, she witnessed Trump’s minions invade the Capitol first-hand.

Subtitled “A Memoir and a Warning Oath”, her book is well-timed. The presidenti­al primaries draw near. The Iowa caucus is next month. Trump laps the Republican pack. No one comes close. Ron DeSantis is in retrograde, his campaign encased in a dunghill of its own making. Nikki Haley has momentum of a sort but remains a long way behind.

Cheney’s book will discomfit many. Mike Johnson, the new House speaker, is shown as a needy and servile fraud. Kevin McCarthy, his predecesso­r, is a bottomless pit of self-abasement. Jim Jordan, the hard-right judiciary chair from Ohio, is ham-handed and insincere.

Johnson misled colleagues about the authorship of a legal brief filed in support of Trump’s efforts to overturn the election, as well as its contents and his own credential­s. He played a game of “bait and switch”, Cheney says. Johnson, she writes, was neither the author of the brief nor a “constituti­onal law expert”, despite advising colleagues that he was.

In reality, Johnson was dean of Judge Paul Pressler School of Law, a small Baptist institutio­n that never opened its doors. Constituti­onal scholar? Nope. Pro-Trump lawyers wrote the pro-Trump brief, not Johnson, Cheney says.

At a recent gathering of Christian legislator­s, Johnson referred to himself as a modern-day Moses.

McCarthy, meanwhile, is vividly portrayed in all his gutless glory. First taking a pass on Johnson’s amicus brief, he then predictabl­y caved. Anything to sit at the cool kids’ table. His tenure as speaker, which followed, will be remembered for its brevity and desperatio­n. His trip to see Trump in Florida, shortly after the election, left Cheney incredulou­s.

“Mar-a-Lago? What the hell, Kevin?” “They’re really worried,” McCarthy said. “Trump’s not eating, so they asked me to come see him.”

Trump not eating. Let that claim sink in.

This year, at his arraignmen­t in Fulton county, Georgia, on charges relating to election subversion there, the former president self-reported as 6ft 3in and 215lb – almost 30lb lighter than at his last White House physical. OK.

Turning to Jordan, Cheney recalls his performanc­e on January 6. She rightly feared for her safety and remains unamused.

“Jim Jordan approached me,” she recalls.

“‘We need to get the ladies off the aisle,’ he said, and put out his hand. ‘Let me help you.’”

“I swatted his hand away. ‘Get away from me. You fucking did this.’”

Jordan’s spokespers­on denies the incident.

Cheney writes: “Most Republican­s currently in Congress will do what Donald Trump asks, no matter what it is. I am very sad to say that America can no longer count on a body of elected Republican­s to protect our republic.”

Mitt Romney has announced his retirement as a senator from Utah. Patrick McHenry, the former acting House speaker from North Carolina, has also decided to quit. Both men voted to certify Joe Biden’s win in 2020. In a Trumpcentr­ic Republican party, that is a big problem. In plain English, Congress is a hellscape. The cold civil war grows hot.

Cheney briefly mentions Kash Patel, a former staffer to Devin Nunes, a congressma­n now in charge of Truth Social, Trump’s social media platform. In the waning days of the Trump administra­tion, Patel was chief of staff at the Pentagon. In a recent interview with Steve Bannon, Patel made clear that in a second Trump term, bureaucrat­s and the press will be targets.

“We will find the conspirato­rs in government … and the media,” Patel said. “Yes, we are going to come after the people in the media … we are putting you all on notice.”

Trump is a would-be Commodus, a debauched emperor, enamored with power, grievance and his own reflection. Gladiator, Ridley Scott’s Oscarwinni­ng epic, remains a movie for our times.

“As a nation, we can endure damaging policies for a four-year term,” Cheney writes. “But we cannot survive a president willing to terminate our constituti­on.” Promoting her book, she added that the US is “sleepwalki­ng into dictatorsh­ip”.

Trump leads Biden in the polls.

Oath and Honor is published in the USby Hachette

vast numbers of animals confined indoors. Art is supposed to reflect a dark reality. So all power to them.”

The reach of Chicken Run 2 is hard to overestima­te. The first film remains the most successful stop-motion movie ever made. It took £180m ($225m) at the box office in 2000; more than £400m when adjusted for inflation. Its sequel is also out on Netflix at the same time as in cinemas.

Netflix, says McIlwain, is becoming an “arbiter of change” in the field. Over the past few years, he says, the Vegetarian Society’s membership has been significan­tly swelled by people affected by two Netflix documentar­ies: Cowspiracy, about the environmen­tal footprint of the meat industry, and Game Changers, about the health benefits of veganism.

“And just this week you had David Attenborou­gh extolling the virtues of a plant-based diet on Planet Earth 3. So we’re at the cusp of a wave. This messaging is becoming more mainstream.”

Children’s movies from studios such as Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks have tended to avoid the issue, perhaps with

 ?? ?? Liz Cheney attends the final meeting of the House January 6 committee, in December last year. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Liz Cheney attends the final meeting of the House January 6 committee, in December last year. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
 ?? ?? A Trump supporter holds up a flag at Trump Tower in New York. Photograph: David Dee Delgado/Reuters
A Trump supporter holds up a flag at Trump Tower in New York. Photograph: David Dee Delgado/Reuters

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