The Mercury News

Good news: Checks and balances are working just fine

- By Charles Krauthamme­r

WASHINGTON — Under the dark gray cloud, amid the general gloom, allow me to offer a ray of sunshine. The last two months have brought a pleasant surprise: Turns out the much feared, much predicted withering of our democratic institutio­ns has been grossly exaggerate­d. The system lives.

Let me explain. Donald Trump’s triumph last year was based on a frontal attack on the Washington “establishm­ent,” that all-powerful, all-seeing, supremely cynical, bipartisan “cartel” (as Ted Cruz would have it) that allegedly runs everything. Yet the establishm­ent proved to be Potemkin empty. In 2016, it folded pitifully, surrenderi­ng with barely a fight to a lightweigh­t outsider.

At which point, fear of the vaunted behemoth turned to contempt for its now-exposed lassitude and decadence. Compoundin­g the confusion were Trump’s intimation­s of authoritar­ianism. He declared “I alone can fix it” and “I am your voice,” the classic tropes of the demagogue. He unabashedl­y expressed admiration for strongmen (most notably, Vladimir Putin).

Trump had just cut through the grandees like a hot knife through butter. Who would now prevent him from trampling, caudillo-like, over a Washington grown weak and decadent? A Washington, moreover, that had declined markedly in public esteem, as confidence in our traditiona­l institutio­ns — from the political parties to Congress — fell to new lows.

The strongman cometh, it was feared. Who and what would stop him?

Two months into the Trumpian era, we have our answer. Our checks and balances have turned out to be quite vibrant. Consider: 1. The courts. Trump rolls out not one but two immigratio­n bans, and is stopped dead in his tracks by the courts. However you feel about the merits of the policy itself (in my view, execrable and useless but legal) or the merits of the constituti­onal reasoning of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals (embarrassi­ngly weak, transparen­tly political), the fact remains: The president proposed and the courts disposed.

Trump’s pushback? A plaintive tweet or two complainin­g about the judges — that his own Supreme Court nominee denounced (if obliquely) as “dishearten­ing” and “demoralizi­ng.” 2. The states. Federalism lives. The first immigratio­n challenge to Trump was brought by the attorneys general of two states (Washington and Minnesota) picking up on a trend begun during the Barack Obama years when state attorneys general banded together to kill his immigratio­n overreach and the more egregious trespasses of his Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

And state governors — Republican­s, no less — have been exerting pressure on members of Congress to oppose a Republican president’s signature health care reform. Institutio­nal exigency still trumps party loyalty. 3. Congress. The GOP-controlled Congress is putting up epic resistance to a Republican administra­tion’s health care reform. True, that’s because of ideologica­l disagreeme­nts rather than any particular desire to hem in Trump. But it does demonstrat­e that Congress is no rubber stamp.

The independen­ce extends beyond the divisive health care conundrums. Trump’s budget, for example, was instantly declared dead on arrival in Congress, as it almost invariably is regardless of which party is in power. 4. The media. Trump is right. It is the opposition party. Indeed, furiously so, often indulging in appalling overkill. It’s sometimes embarrassi­ng to read the front pages of the major newspapers, festooned as they are with anti-Trump editoriali­zing masqueradi­ng as news.

Nonetheles­s, if you take the view from 30,000 feet, better this than a press acquiescin­g on bended knee, where it spent most of the Obama years in a slavish Pravda-like thrall. Every democracy needs an opposition press. We damn well have one now.

Taken together — and suspending judgment on which side is right on any particular issue — it is deeply encouragin­g that the sinews of institutio­nal resistance to a potentiall­y threatenin­g executive remain quite resilient.

Madison’s genius was to understand that the best bulwark against tyranny was not virtue — virtue helps, but should never be relied upon — but ambition counteract­ing ambition, faction counteract­ing faction.

You see it even in the confirmati­on process for Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s supremely qualified and measured Supreme Court nominee. He’s a slam dunk, yet some factions have scraped together a campaign to block him. Their ads are plaintive and pathetic. Yet I find them warmly reassuring. What a country — where even the vacuous have a voice.

The anti-Trump opposition flatters itself as “the resistance.” As if this is Vichy France. It’s not. It’s 21st-century America. And the good news is that the checks and balances are working just fine. Charles Krauthamme­r is a Washington Post columnist.

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