Chattanooga Times Free Press

HOW CAN WE STOP AN UNSTABLE PRESIDENT?

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If you spent any time last week listening to President Donald Trump, you have to be alarmed by his mental and emotional state.

“Hi, perhaps you recognize me,” he said Wednesday in a rambling, nutty video that sounded like a cheesy infomercia­l. “It’s your favorite president. And I’m standing in front of the Oval Office at the White House, which is always an exciting place to be.”

Trump’s face makeup was so dark, I thought for a moment it was Tan Mom, not Tan Don.

The president made a bunch of odd claims. He said that taking an experiment­al antibody treatment for his COVID-19 infection was his idea, not his doctors’. He promised to approve the drug for widespread use. (That’s the FDA’s job.) He vowed it would be free. (It won’t.)

“It’s a cure,” he said, though there is no known cure at this point.

“I want everybody to be given the same treatment as your president because I feel great,” he said. “I feel perfect. I think it was a blessing from God that I caught it.”

On Thursday, in a rambling, nutty interview with Maria Bartiromo of Fox Business Network, he attacked two of his most loyal allies, Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo and Attorney General William Barr, for failing to pursue and/or prosecute Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton, who, according to Trump, have committed “the greatest political crime(s) in the history of our country.”

That evening, in a rambling, nutty interview with Sean Hannity, he attacked Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who authoritie­s say was the target of a serious kidnapping and assassinat­ion plot by domestic terrorists, for her stringent COVID-19 measures.

“She’s complainin­g,” he said, “but it was my Justice Department that arrested them … What she is doing is a horrible thing to the people.”

He also proclaimed, “If I weren’t president, you wouldn’t have a Second Amendment right now.”

Trump’s delusions of grandeur are now having delusions of grandeur.

On Friday, in an entirely related developmen­t, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi D-California, and Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Maryland, introduced a bill to create a commission that would be responsibl­e for applying the 25th Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on.

The amendment, enacted 53 years ago after the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy, says that if the president dies or becomes incapacita­ted, the vice president becomes president.

But who decides whether or not the president is incapacita­ted?

The 25th Amendment says that the vice president and a majority of the president’s Cabinet may declare the president unable to do his job, or that Congress can pass a law designatin­g another body responsibl­e for declaring the president unfit, should the need arise.

If the proposed bill passes, a commission created by Congress, made up of medical experts and former high-ranking government officials, would be responsibl­e for declaring the president incapacita­ted.

So, let’s say you have an unusually narcissist­ic president who has been on medication, say a steroid like dexamethas­one that is known to sometimes impair judgment. Obviously, such a president is not going to declare himself incapacita­ted. That is the very nature of impaired judgment.

And let’s say his Cabinet is composed of loyalists who are terrified of crossing their already mercurial boss even as he trashes them on national media.

That’s the point at which the proposed Commission on Presidenti­al Capacity to Discharge the Powers and Duties of Office, designed to be bipartisan, bicameral and as free of politics as is humanly possible, would step in.

“This is for the most extreme situations where you have a president who cannot fulfill the responsibi­lities of the office,” said Raskin. “What happens if the president of the United States is in a coma? Or on a ventilator?”

Or — and this is me just spitballin­g here — he is out of his flipping mind?

The president’s strange behavior, exacerbate­d by a brush with mortality and possibly heavy doses of a steroid used to combat serious COVID-19 infections, has created an imperative here.

As Raskin said on Friday, “The situation has focused everybody’s mind.”

I know what some people are thinking: Like the impeachmen­t, this must be another Democratic plot to get rid of a duly elected president.

Except it’s not, because the bill would only apply to future presidents.

If Trump wins re-election, it could apply to him. If former Vice President Joe Biden wins, it could apply to him as well.

This is so obvious that even Trump tried to score a political point by noting it.

“Crazy Nancy Pelosi is looking at the 25th Amendment in order to replace Joe Biden with Kamala Harris,” he tweeted Friday. “The Dems want that to happen fast because Sleepy Joe is out of it!!!”

Biden is not “out of it,” but at 77, he would be the oldest president to assume office.

If elected, he could certainly, at some point in his presidency, suffer some form of incapacita­tion.

The country will be well served by the creation of a commission that would — free of politics — help guide the nation though a moment in which the president is not able to think clearly, behave appropriat­ely or properly carry out the duties of his office.

Exactly, come to think of it, like the moment we are in right now.

 ??  ?? Robin Abcarian
Robin Abcarian

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