Chicago Sun-Times

How one senator ditched constituti­onal conservati­sm for the cult of Trump

- MONA CHAREN @monacharen­EPPC Mona Charen is policy editor of The Bulwark and host of the “Beg to Differ” podcast.

Ididn’t watch much of this year’s CPAC. My digestion is sound, but there’s no point in taking unnecessar­y risks.

Still, I did note the presence of Sen. Mike Lee, a legislator who styles himself a “constituti­onal conservati­ve.”

Lee is the son of a distinguis­hed former solicitor general of the United States, a graduate of Brigham Young University and its law school, and the author of three books on the Founding era: “Our Lost Constituti­on,” “Our Lost Declaratio­n” and “Written Out of History: The Forgotten Founders Who Fought Big Government.”

That’s a lot of losing and forgetting.

But it seems that Lee is the one who has forgotten what the founding was about.

Less than two months have elapsed since Donald Trump committed the most monstrous attack on the constituti­onal order in 150 years by siccing a violent mob on the Congress as it was attempting to certify the election of the man who defeated him. That came on the heels of attempts to strong-arm the secretary of state of Georgia to “find” enough votes to alter the results, efforts to persuade state legislator­s to defy the voters and replace their states’ electoral college slates in his favor and a protracted effort to discredit the election process itself as fraudulent.

CPAC was the first gathering of Republican­s and conservati­ves since those events. And yet, the “constituti­onal conservati­ve” Lee did not see fit to mention any of that in his address. He spoke of “leftists who hate the Bill of Rights” and he argued that “faith in government is tyranny.” He denounced Democratic governors, who had imposed what he regarded as overly restrictiv­e COVID-19 rules, as tyrants and stressed that “we” (meaning Republican­s) “trust the people.”

Lee may be sincere in his desire to restore some equilibriu­m to the separation of powers. He has introduced several bills that would curtail executive authority, and when Trump usurped legislativ­e powers and arguably broke the law by declaring a spurious border emergency, Lee was among a small number of senators who opposed him. But that burst of independen­ce must have exhausted the senator, because at the time of Trump’s first impeachmen­t trial, less than a year later, Lee was among Trump’s firmest defenders. “What he did was not impeachabl­e,” Lee told Politico. “It was not criminal. And I don’t think what he did was even wrong.”

CPAC was, according to The Bulwark’s Tim Miller, a festival of forgetting. If the Capitol insurrecti­on was mentioned at all, it was only to blame it on judges who ruled against Trump’s risible lawsuits. Mostly though, the speakers stuck to antifa and imaginary late-night ballot dumps.

If Lee is genuinely concerned about the constituti­onal order, his highest priority should be the authoritar­ian turn that the Republican Party has taken under Trump. He might begin with these facts: Nearly two-thirds of the Republican House caucus, along with eight senators, voted not to certify President Joe Biden’s election. Seventeen Republican state attorneys general signed onto Texas’ prepostero­us lawsuit challengin­g the results in Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan, Georgia and Wisconsin. (The Supreme Court tossed it.)

The MAGA crowd stormed the Capitol and erected a gallows, but elected Republican­s helped prepare the ground.

Any “constituti­onal conservati­ve” surveying the wreckage of the post-Trump GOP must be concerned about the state of the people they are so ready to “trust.” Can self-government succeed when a plurality of one of the two major political parties no longer even believes in democracy?

A survey of Trump supporters, who number about half the Republican Party, found that not only do they nearly universall­y believe the fraudulent election lie, but 70% want Trump to serve another term and remain in office — after his second term is complete.

Among Republican­s more broadly, 86% opposed conviction and disqualifi­cation in the second impeachmen­t trial, and 83% thought the trial itself should never have happened. In other words, not even attempting to subvert the election through improper influence, pressure and, eventually, violence was enough to break their cult-like devotion.

Sixty-five percent do not believe Biden was legitimate­ly elected. Nearly 30% of Republican­s believe the chief claim of the QAnon conspiracy, that Trump was secretly fighting a cannibal cabal of childabusi­ng Democrats and Hollywood elites. Half of Republican­s aver that antifa, not MAGA supporters, rioted at the Capitol.

Lee waxed indignant about some regulation­s instituted legally by Democratic governors to deal with a 100-year emergency. Did some go overboard? Maybe. Is that a threat to the Republic? Good God, no.

On the other hand, a significan­t portion of the electorate is slavishly loyal to a person rather than a party, philosophy or country. A huge number of Americans have had their faith in democracy significan­tly eroded. A large minority of the population believes pernicious falsehoods and cannot be disabused. And leaders who hold advanced degrees and write books about the founding cannot bring themselves to confront that reality. That seems like a bigger challenge.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/POOL VIA AP ?? Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, speaks last month during a confirmati­on hearing for Judge Merrick Garland, President Joe Biden’s nominee to be Attorney General.
DREW ANGERER/POOL VIA AP Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, speaks last month during a confirmati­on hearing for Judge Merrick Garland, President Joe Biden’s nominee to be Attorney General.
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