Military veteran and former Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel,
a one-time Republican Senator from Nebraska, suggested a military coup could
occur in America when he said, “The real threat is internal.” He added that
America’s future is “in jeopardy.” What are Biden and Hagel worried about? What
are they telling us? Are they afraid one of our major political parties – the Republican
Party – has become the anti-democracy party?
If
not Treason, What?
poles. They took over both
congressional chambers and chanted things like “Hang Mike Pence” and “Kill
Nancy Pelosi.” Their invasion ultimately
caused five deaths. For more than four hours,
the mob disrupted
congressional certification of Electoral College
votes. Securing the Capitol took that amount of time. In all American history,
the United States Capitol building had never been taken over by domestic
invaders and only once –during the War of 1812
– by foreigners.
Though
many in the crowd wore Trump
clothing
and carried Trump signs, some in the
right wing media claimed the insurgents were actually Black Lives Matter
and Antifa members
masquerading as Trump supporters. Some suspect
Republican members of Congress
may have helped organize the invasion or at least enabled it.
Who’s
Complicit?
House
Homeland
Security Chairman Bennie Thompson
of Mississippi and the ranking
Republican on that committee, New York’s
John Katko,
drafted bipartisan legislation that would have created an independent
commission to investigate the January 6 insurrection. House GOP leader Kevin
McCarthy regularly consulted Katko during that process and
Thompson gave Katko all he asked for in the negotiations. Still, McCarthy
withdrew his support and urged that Republicans vote against the measure. Only
35 GOP members ended up voting with Democrats when the measure passed the
House.In the Senate,
Republicans launched a filibuster,
meaning the legislation needed 60 votes. Just seven Republicans joined 50
Democrats in voting yes, so the measure failed.
Why would 43 of the 50
Republican senators not
want answers to the questions surrounding the
insurrection? Who organized it, for example? Why were the invaders determined to overthrow the democratic process by violent means? What were Republican
senators afraid of? Why would they not support bipartisan legislation aimed at
getting the facts about such an unprecedented domestic attack on the American
Capitol? Something is clearly afloat.
One
obvious answer lies in the control Donald Trump
still exerts over the base of the Republican
Party. In controlling that base, he controls
members of Congress it elects. “He has a grip over politicians because he has a
grip over voters,” says
Carol Leonnig,
author of Zero Fail: The Rise andFall of
the Secret Service. These elected officials want to maintain their offices and
the benefits that go with serving the interests of movement conservatism. An
interlocking set of institutions and alliances wins elections by stoking
cultural and racial anxiety while using its power
in pushing an elitist economic agenda, as
Paul Krugman
writes in Arguing with Zombies. Since
Republicans want to regain control of the House and Senate, they know they
can’t do so without the white lemming that makes up the Republican base. In the wake of the GOP’s
rejection of the January 6
commission measure, former Trump
national security adviser
Michal Flynn,
once a three-star general in the U.S. Army, told a QAnon
conference a military coup “should happen” in the United States. Flynn referred
to events in Myanmar, where the military overthrew a democratically elected
government on the basis of unproven allegations of voter fraud. Other similarly
disturbing statements from Trump supporters haven’t gotten the attention Flynn
got, but it appears treasonous comments are becoming common place among
Republicans and Trump supporters.
So
What’s the Bargain?
Lyndon Johnson,
the nation’s 36th president, once said, “If you can convince the
lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re
picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on and he’ll empty his
pockets for you.”
Donald
Trump ran for president in 2016 as the
champion of the little guy. His only
significant legislative achievement, however, was a tax cut for the rich that
ripped a hole in the social safety net his blue-collar supporters need. So,
what do those supporters get out of the deal? Mostly, it seems, what President
Johnson told us – a chance to look down on someone.
Trump no longer pretends
he’s going to make life better for working class whites in his base. They get
xenophobic diatribes and racist venom directed at blacks, browns, and Asians
but not much else. In the final analysis, Trump gives them someone they can
look down on. Meantime, with the support of that base, the Republican Party has
become the anti-democracy party. It seeks to deprive all but white people of
the benefits of democracy. That’s the Faustian bargain. So they can look down
on blacks, browns, Asians, and other out groups, Trump supporters discard
democracy, with the complicity of their leaders.
So, we ask again – what
do Biden and Hagel know? If we ignore the clear and present danger this “deal,”
this “bargain” Trump’s supporters and GOP leaders have struck, we could all lose.
Unfortunately, you are 100% correct. The Republican Party of Trump is a clear and present danger and a threat to democracy. To function ideally, we need two parties - but not one that wants to overthrow our system of free elections! The only hope is that other Republicans throw out the Trumpers/fascists. Not much sign of this happening yet.
ReplyDeleteLike many of my friends who grew up in the South I could not bring myself to join the party of Strom Thurman and Orval Faubus. Now we are no longer members of the party of Trump, Reagan and Gingrich. But institutions and not ad hoc committees , there for the long haul, create and sustain change. The Democratic Party has never demonstrated the attention span or the cohesion to effect institution level change (with the singular exception of FDR). We do not have even one political party with a plan to save democracy. The republicans are hell bent on killing democracy because it does not work for their minority status anymore. They will not win the 2022 election but they will take it by virtue of the laws their legislatures are passing. the courts will not save it or us. That is the dismal prospective from here. Pray that I am 100 percent wrong.
ReplyDeleteRay Carpenter
I agree with George Lazarus. From history this is what it must have been like in the '30s but then we were in an economic depression. I understand the extreme right and the gerrymandered House but it's hard to understand the Senate. It's hard to understand how 76M voted for Trump. They weren't all white. Our democracy is truly being tested. Yet I'm optimistic we will get through this as a nation but it will take work.
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