The Review

This time Trump makes election stakes unusually high

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In a prebuttal to President Joe Biden’s “Battle for the Soul of the Nation” speech last week, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy called on the president to “apologize for slandering tens of millions of Americans as fascists.”

He was upset by the president’s recent statement that the “extreme MAGA philosophy” in the Republican Party’s Trump wing is “like semi-fascism.”

I say, if the shoe fits, wear it. Look, for example, at how polls and right-wing pundit chatter was revealing some ambivalenc­e in Trump’s supporters about whether it was time to move on to some other rising party stars such as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. That sentiment quickly faded when the courtsanct­ioned FBI search of his Mar-a-Lago home for national security documents immediatel­y triggered a surge in loyalty to Trump.

“I want to be very clear,” Biden said. “Not every Republican, not even the majority of Republican­s, are MAGA Republican­s.”

I agree. But Trump’s support remain so strong in party ranks that sometimes it’s difficult to tell the difference.

That fierce loyalty seemed to embolden Trump last week as he unleashed 88 messages on his social media platform. The messages carried various conspiracy theories.

“Declare the rightful winner or, and this would be the minimal solution, declare the 2020 Election irreparabl­y compromise­d and have a new Election, immediatel­y!,” he wrote.

Even die-hard conservati­ve scholars agreed that possibilit­y was bonkers, coming almost two years too late.

Yet, emboldened by his MAGA enablers, Trump grabbed attention prior to Biden’s prime-time address by promising to issue full pardons and a government apology to rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

He also said he was financiall­y supporting some of the Jan. 6 defendants, though he didn’t name names or say exactly how he was supporting them.

Nor did he explain how his support for the rioters who brutally beat police officers squares with his usual law-and-order support for the men in blue. About 140 members of law enforcemen­t were injured during the riot, according to The Washington Post. One officer, Brian Sicknick, who had been sprayed with a powerful irritant, suffered a stroke and died a day later.

And McCarthy, among other Republican­s, wonders why terms such as “semi-fascism” come up. Compared to my own feelings about those thugs at the Capitol, I think Biden was being polite.

Sure, I don’t have to be an Army veteran — although I am — to feel uncomforta­ble about watching Biden deliver a speech that sounded unusually political for an occasion in which he was flanked by two Marines standing at attention. Yet, politics goes with the territory, especially when the “Battle for the Soul of the Nation” obviously is tied to the actions and attitudes of the most prominent figure in the rival party.

Indeed, politics and governance often go hand-in-hand. But this time around, as the president said, this is not normal.

“Donald Trump and the MAGA Republican­s represent an extremism that threatens the very foundation­s of our republic,” Biden said.

We’re witnessing the evidence in real time. With the midterms ahead, we, the people, have another opportunit­y to decide what direction our democracy is going to take — while we still have a democracy.

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