Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Escaping Trump’s revenge: ‘It only takes one crackpot’

- By Robert Reich Robert Reich, former U.S. secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of “The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It.” Read more from Robert Reich at https://robertreic­h.substa

Nikki Haley won the Republican primary in Washington, D.C., with about 63% of the vote to Donald Trump’s 33%, securing all 19 available delegates, and becoming the first woman to ever win a Republican presidenti­al primary.

To be sure, the contest was tiny: Just over 2,000 Republican­s voted in the overwhelmi­ngly Democratic city of Washington. But I admire Nikki Haley’s tenacity.

On the other hand, I’m learning something disturbing about other Trump opponents, both Democrats and Republican­s.

When I served in Bill Clinton’s Cabinet, one of my favorite progressiv­e lawmakers was Jim McDermott, who represente­d Seattle from 1989 to 2017. Jim had a long and distinguis­hed legislativ­e record. In his final year in Congress, he became one of the most trenchant critics of Donald Trump. He’s still criticizin­g Trump — from his safe house.

Soon after Trump was elected in 2016, Jim blasted him for issuing inflammato­ry tweets, such as claiming without evidence that millions of people had voted illegally in the presidenti­al election. Jim also openly worried about future sessions of Congress. “I think it’s going to be a very tough … helping the new president understand how a democracy actually works.”

Jim is now living in Civrac-en Medoc, a town of a few hundred people in western France, north of Bordeaux.

In a recent interview with Elizabeth Becker, a former Washington Post correspond­ent, Jim said he’s getting calls from former colleagues in Congress who fear what a vengeful Trump might do if reelected.

They wonder how to gauge the seriousnes­s of Trump’s increasing­ly dire threats to American democracy and potentiall­y to them and their families. “They are scared to do what I did — [to expatriate from the U.S.] — but are scared to stay,” Jim said. He tells them: “If you can afford it, buy a second home in France, or Spain, or Portugal, wherever … a second home that could become a safe house.”

I’ve heard similar concerns in recent months from lawmakers, officials, prosecutor­s, journalist­s, and celebritie­s who have been publicly critical of Trump.

They worry about Trump’s promise of “retributio­n” if reelected, his intention to direct the Justice Department to investigat­e “every Marxist prosecutor in America,” his claim that his indictment­s have “released the genie out of the box” that would allow him to weaponize the government against his opponents, and his vow to “root out … the radical-left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country.”

They’re also concerned about the apparent willingnes­s of Trump’s followers to resort to violence against his opponents.

A third of Republican­s agree with the statement that “true American patriots may have to resort to violence in order to save our country.” Among Republican­s with a favorable view of Trump, 41% now agree that violence may be necessary. (By contrast, 22% of independen­ts and 13% of Democrats agree.)

“It only takes one crackpot, like the guy who tried to kill Paul Pelosi,” one former lawmaker told me.

I never thought this nation would get to a point where critics and opponents of a potential United States president begin to wonder whether to leave the country to keep themselves and their families safe. That’s standard for critics of bloodthirs­ty dictators like Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un, but in America?

Elizabeth Becker asks, rhetorical­ly: “Is the United States facing a situation so dangerous that you would be foolish if you didn’t have a backup plan? Is it hyperbole to imagine the country sliding into authoritar­ian rule that would unleash violence, retributio­n, and repression?”

I hope not. But the mere fact the question is being posed is itself a frightenin­g commentary on where we’ve come — and may be heading.

Every American, including Jim McDermott, has a right to live where they feel safe, of course. And if they can afford a “backup plan,” they may be wise to consider one.

But I hope people with Jim’s principles and abilities — and Nikki Haley’s tenacity — remain here to defend America against Trump’s threats to democracy, even if he’s defeated in November.

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