The Mercury News

As president descends, it is our job to stop him

- By Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON >> It’s not your imaginatio­n. Donald Trump’s occupancy of the White House is every bit as insane, corrupt and dangerous as you might fear. Witness this jawdroppin­g message to the sitting president of the United States from the former director of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency:

“When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the dustbin of history. You may scapegoat Andy McCabe, but you will not destroy America … America will triumph over you.”

John Brennan, who headed the CIA for four years under Barack Obama, is not given to hysterics. Yet there he was on Saturday morning, using Twitter to tear into the supposed leader of the free world.

What set Brennan off was the administra­tion’s decision to fire Andrew McCabe from his job as deputy director of the FBI just two days before he would have qualified for full pension benefits. Trump had been tweeting with cartoon-villain glee over the dismissal, doubtless because he saw it as furthering his campaign to discredit any witness who might offer damning evidence against him in the Russia probe.

Trump ran the same dishonest routine on fired FBI director James Comey, and he’s also trying his best to sully the sterling reputation of Special Counsel Robert

Mueller. The Oval Office has seen venality before, but it has never seen anything like Trump.

On Sunday, my Washington Post colleague Ruth Marcus reported that the president required senior officials to sign non-disclosure agreements much like the one his lawyers are using in an effort to silence porn actress Stormy Daniels about the affair she says she had with Trump. Such agreements are probably not enforceabl­e in the context of White House service, many legal experts say, but the intent may be to intimidate the signers into silence.

Read that last paragraph again: attempts to squelch free speech and the public’s right to know; strongarm tactics of intimidati­on, furtive sex and a porn star by a man in an office held by Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt. Last week, Trump fired Secretary of State Rex Tillerson by means of a tweet.

And if anything, he is getting worse — perhaps because he senses that the Mueller investigat­ion is closing in, perhaps because he is just hopelessly overwhelme­d by the job.

The Constituti­on gives Congress the tools it needs to deal with this situation, but Republican­s in both the House and Senate refuse to use them. There could be constraint­s — legislatio­n protecting Mueller from being fired, for example. There could be oversight — hearings into the havoc Trump’s cabinet is wreaking on government agencies, such as Tillerson’s decimation of the senior foreign service or EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt’s war against climate science. There could be investigat­ions — not just into Russia’s election meddling but into the many apparent and potential conflicts of interest involving Trump’s far-flung real estate and branding empire.

If Trump does try to fire Mueller, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell should get much of the blame. They have given Trump no reason to believe they will ever stand up to him.

Fortunatel­y, the Constituti­on gives ultimate power to you and me. With every outrageous, shocking and depressing week, the November election becomes more important. The Trump presidency will keep going from bad to worse, and it is our responsibi­lity to use our votes to make it stop.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, left, and House Speaker Paul Ryan have given Trump no reason to believe they will stand up to him.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, left, and House Speaker Paul Ryan have given Trump no reason to believe they will stand up to him.

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