The Morning Call

America has already fired Donald Trump

- Robert Reich

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s soon-to-bedelivere­d report will trigger months of congressio­nal investigat­ions, subpoenas, court challenges, partisan slugfests, media revelation­s and more desperate conspiracy claims by Donald Trump, all against the backdrop of the burning questions: Will he be impeached by the House? Will he be convicted by the Senate? Will he pull a Richard Nixon and resign?

In other words, will America fire Trump?

I have news for you. America has already fired him.

When the public fires a president before Election Day, as it did with Jimmy Carter, Richard Nixon and Herbert Hoover, they don’t send him a letter telling him he’s fired. They just make him irrelevant.

It’s happened to Trump. The courts and House Democrats are moving against him. Senate Republican­s are quietly subverting him. Even Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told him to end the shutdown.

The Fed is running economic policy. Top-level civil servants are managing the day-to-day work of the agencies.

Isolated in the White House, distrustfu­l of aides, at odds with intelligen­ce agencies, distant from his Cabinet heads, Trump has no system to make or implement decisions.

His tweets don’t create headlines as before. His rallies are ignored. His lies have become old hat.

Action and excitement have shifted elsewhere, to Democratic challenger­s, even to a 29-year-old freshman congresswo­man too young to run for president.

Don’t get me wrong. He’s still dangerous, like an old land mine buried in the mud. He could start a nuclear war.

Yet even America’s adversarie­s just humor him. Kim Jong Un and Xi Jinping give him tidbits to share with the American public, then do whatever they want.

Why did America fire Trump? If the nation were to write him a letter informing him he’s no longer president, it would go like this:

Dear Mr. President,

While many of us disagree on ideology and values, we agree on practical things like obeying the Constituti­on and not letting big corporatio­ns and the wealthy run everything.

Your 35-day government shutdown was a senseless abuse of power. So, too, your “national emergency” to build your wall with money Congress refused to appropriat­e.

When you passed your tax bill, you promised our paychecks would increase by an average of $4,000, but we never got the raise. Our employers used the tax savings to buy back their shares of stock and give themselves raises instead.

At the same time, many big corporatio­ns aren’t paying a dime in taxes. Worse yet, they’re getting refunds.

They aren’t breaking any tax laws or regulation­s. That’s because they made the tax laws and regulation­s. You gave them a free hand.

You’re supposed to be working for us, not for giant corporatio­ns. But they’re doing better than ever, as are their top executives and biggest investors. Yet nothing has trickled down. We’re getting shafted.

Which is why more than half of us support Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s proposed 70 percent tax on dollars earned in excess of $10 million a year, and more than 60 percent of us support Elizabeth Warren’s proposed 2 percent tax on households with a net worth of $50 million or more.

You’ve also shown you don’t have a clue about health care. You promised us something better than the Affordable Care Act, but all you’ve done is whittle it back.

A big reason we gave Democrats control of the House last November was your threat to eliminate protection for people with pre-existing conditions. Are you even aware that 70 percent of us now favor Medicare for All?

We’ll give you official notice you’re fired on Nov. 3, 2020, if not before. Until then, you can keep the house and perks, but you’re toast.

Respectful­ly,

America

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