Showing posts with label Vladimir Putin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vladimir Putin. Show all posts

Sunday, March 1, 2020

FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE 2.0: AMERICAN DEMOCRACY, AUTOCRACY, PLUTOCRACY, OR FACISM?


American intelligence agencies have confirmed Russian interference in the 2020 United States presidential election. They recently advised the House Intelligence Committee of their conclusion Russia wants
to do again what most believe it did in 2016 -
help tip the scales in President Donald Trump’s favor. A consensus exists that Russian social media activity, other forms of disinformation, and computer hacking helped Trump in 2016.
 
By talking with Congress, the intelligence briefers provoked Trump’s ire. He reacted by firing Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire. Trump reportedly raged that Democrats will use the reports of meddling against him. 
The interference disturbs us, especially since the nation was warned this was coming, and precious few precautions have been taken against its possible effects. In his congressional testimony during the summer of 2019, former Special Counsel Robert Mueller emphasized his belief the Russians were meddling, “as we speak.” With it now established the Russians are at it again, the question of why we should care arises.

American Elections for Americans
We wouldn’t have thought we’d need a rationale for eliminating foreign interference in our elections. Sanctity of the ballot enjoys a treasured place in American democracy.
Having the ballot means much less if citizens can’t depend on a secure electoral system and campaigns free of foreign meddling.

In many contexts, American history shows the value democracy places on voting. Much of the civil rights movement concerned voting
rights. Lyndon Johnson  thought giving blacks the vote would level the playing field in the South where they suffered under the spell of Jim Crow. Before he ran for president, Barack Obama expressed the view that advocates for social progress should focus on elections as a way of winning rights and power, not litigation, reasoning that what courts can give, they can take away. Once a majority of Americans have spoken through their ballots, elected officials are less likely to go a different direction.  

From the beginning, the nation’s leaders took steps against foreign interference in America’s internal affairs. The constitution’s framers, for example, included an emoluments clause that keeps foreigners
from buying influence with U.S. officeholders. Congress enacted legislation, like the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and a the ban on foreign campaign contributions, aimed at limiting outside influence on the American government.

Managing our own affairs, including voting and elections, without foreign interference occupies a sacred place in American democracy. 
    
Results v. Process

Despite this seemingly obvious rationale for elections decided without fake Facebook ads
Fake Facebook ads posted by Russians per Intelligence Committee
and flyers containing falsehoods composed by Russian operatives, we know some Trump supporters who accept such interference because the 2016 meddling produced the right outcome. The result, they say, justifies the means.
 
They note the strong economy, Trump’s immigration policies, his judicial appointments, and other aspects of the incumbent’s tenure they like. They can overlook the process, so long as they get their desired result.

The three of us view process as imperative. Are American campaigns and elections run fairly and on a playing field that gives everyone a fair chance? Has an unseen force, like Russian operatives, placed a thumb on the scale, corrupting the process?

With campaigns and elections run fairly and without interference from outside our borders, we think democratic principles have prevailed and we can live with whatever outcomes such elections produce. With a fair process, Americans more likely trust results that ensue.

What Goes Around Comes Around
We’d prefer believing no Democratic president would behave as Trump has or accept foreign help in getting elected. Sadly, we could no more guarantee that than we can perform magic tricks. Of course, a future Democratic president could engage in his or her own set of deplorable acts.


Take Lyndon Johnson, the 36th President, to whom we referred earlier. Johnson’s most
36th US President Lyndon Johnson
significant biographer,
Robert Caro, wrote in the preface to his 1982 book, The Path to Power, the first volume in his series, The Years of Lyndon Johnson, that the more one follows Johnson’s
life, “the more  apparent it becomes
that alongside the thread of achievement running
through it runs another thread, as dark as the other is bright, and as fraught with consequences for history: a hunger for power in its most naked form, for power not to improve the lives of others, but to manipulate and dominate them, to bend them to his will.”
 
Caro further argued that “if during the long evolution from a ‘constitutional’ to an ‘imperial’ [p]residency there was a single administration in which the balance tipped decisively, it was the [p]residency of Lyndon Johnson.” 

Caro’s observations on Johnson make chillingly clear a Democrat capable of Donald Trump’s excesses is quite possible. It’s so possible, it’s already happened. Perhaps only the details differ.

So, we remind Trump supporters who see results they’re getting from the current presidency and, therefore, support anything that keeps it in place, that American politics runs in cycles. A president you don’t like will hold the office someday, perhaps a president who advocates forced abortions or wants confiscation of firearms. Are you really comfortable with THAT president getting help from foreign governments?
   
America stands at a crossroads. Do we stay
with democracy  and keep working out its imperfections or do we toss it onto the scrap heap of history and try fascism, autocracy, plutocracy, or some other form of government? The current occupant of The White House shows little interest in strengthening democracy and its institutions. Rather than take our word for it, we again
recommend former State Secretary
Madeleine Albright’s  insightful Fascism: A Warning. She makes the compelling case that our current president takes his cues from a long line of leaders who were popularly elected but turned their countries into autocracies, plutocracies, or fascist states.

We feel compelled to sound the alarm.    


Tuesday, November 5, 2019

IMPEACHMENT: IT’S THE REAL DEAL NOW


Impeaching President Donald J. Trump now seems inevitable.  On a party-line vote, the House of Representatives last week endorsed a resolution opening a formal impeachment inquiry. The vote never would have
been taken if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wasn't confident she has the votes for impeachment. Soon public hearings will begin, followed by approval of at least one article of impeachment in the judiciary committee. If the full House supports
at least one article, action would shift to the Senate for a trial. There, conviction and removal from office require a two-thirds vote, admittedly an unlikely prospect now.   
Mounting evidence Trump abused his office by withholding aid from a beleaguered ally while demanding help from that foreign government in digging up dirt on a political opponent has persuaded about half the country Congress should remove him. Though

Trump’s sins as described in the report of Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller didn’t produce widespread support for impeachment, shake-down of a foreign leader for personal domestic political advantage appears to have broken through.
The story isn’t complicated. A White House  summary of a call between Trump and the Ukrainian president
told most people all they needed to know. When House investigators began taking testimony from people involved in U.S. – Ukrainian relations the doubts about Trump’s constitutionally prohibited behavior fell away.  A host of credible witnesses, like Ukraine Ambassador William Taylor and a decorated National Security Council official, Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, have given the Ukraine scandal gravitas and staying power with the public. House leaders, like intelligence committee chairman Adam Schiff, indicate Taylor, Lt. Col. Vindman, and perhaps even former National Security Advisor John Bolton may testify in the public hearing phase. History suggests increasing public support for impeachment would likely result from public hearings.

Our Say
We return to impeachment now because it’s real. In four previous posts we looked at it under abstract circumstances. This isn’t hypothetical anymore. This will happen.
We began writing about impeaching Trump in March 2017, just two months into his presidency. Early signs of corruption  produced Woodson’s prediction that impeachment proceedings against the President would begin “in the next year.”  It took a little longer, but even then the road pointed in the direction we’re now headed.
Three months later, in June 2017, Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey induced from us a piece on the history of the Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Bill Clinton impeachment proceedings. We speculated about what might happen politically if Trump were impeached and removed. As things move forward in 2019, we realize we’ll have to revisit the political calculus.  It’s different now that we’re on the cusp of an election, but no less important in developing an understanding of what all this means for American politics.
In July 2018, we briefly revisited impeachment in the wake of Trump’s shameful performance in Helsinki alongside Russian strongman Vladimir Putin. With former State Secretary Madeleine Albright’s
book Fascism as a backdrop and organizing principle, we asked if impeachment “could reign in Trump’s behavior,” even if the Senate didn’t remove him from office.

Finally, in April 2019, evidence of Trump’s scandalous behavior became clearer and clearer. We learned of so many sins, we asked, “Impeachment Anyone?We addressed the issue in terms of political reality versus the country’s need for a moral response, in the process revealing our own varied views on the issue.

Ukraine Changes the Game
Throughout the now nearly three years of the Trump presidency, as the specter of impeachment lurked beneath the surface and the bad acts piled up, there has always been the idea of relying on the 2020 election as the best way of ridding the nation of Trump disease. Wait, counseled people like Rob, who for most of that time, thought the political price of impeaching Trump wasn’t worth it. We could tough it out until the election in the belief limiting Trump to one term wouldn’t permanently damage the country. Trump’s behavior in connection with Ukraine calls the morality of that view into serious question.

Woodson and Henry now offer compelling
observations about why leaving it to the election isn’t a good idea. Woodson notes the possibility of tampering with the 2020 election. Mueller told Congress he was sure the Russians were, as he spoke, readying their next attack. Trump, by saying he’d welcome dirt on his opponent from foreign sources, invited just such interference. It happened in 2016. It could happen again.   

Henry, a former federal magistrate judge who says perhaps the best part of his job was swearing in new citizens, reminds us morality commands we not betray the brave citizens like Ambassador Taylor, Lt. Col. Vindman, and the original
whistleblower who stepped forward and told what they knew, sometimes at great personal cost. Trump and his allies vilified these men and women for doing nothing more than honoring their duty under the constitution.
 
All three of us learned in law school the venerable principle that the law is entitled to every person’s evidence. People like
Ambassador Taylor and Lt. Col. Vindman followed that principle with their closed-door testimony and probably will again when the hearings go public. In the absence of impeaching Trump, we will have done those individuals and the principle they followed a great disservice. We cannot afford the price of doing that.   


Monday, July 30, 2018

TRUMP: TREASON? A CALL TO ACTION



The Responsibility of Patriots: Impeach, Vote Democrat in Mid-term, Take our country back!

We wrote recently about former State Secretary Madeleine Albright’s warning that facist rumblings around the world
threaten democracy.  We didn’t hesitate, and neither did the Secretary in her book Fascism: A Warning, to include President Donald Trump among those about whom we should have such concerns.  Things have only gotten worse since we shared the publication.  More reasons than ever exist for believing Trump existentially threatens democratic institutions in this country and the alliances the United States helped fashion that have kept the western democracies safe in the 70 plus years since the Second World War.

 
We need not detail Trump’s disgraceful performance in Helsinkiafter his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.  Others have said plenty.  As American patriots, the three of us view Trump’s actions there as beyond the pale.  We’ve seen enough to declare Trump a Kleptocrat, if not an outright fascist.  His behavior calls for a response from all responsible Americans.




CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER

As lawyers, we know the dangers of hyperbole.  Lots of people say Trump represents a danger to democracy.  They point to his race baiting after Charlottesville, his disgraceful practice of separating infants and children from their parents at the border as part of a cruel immigration policy, his attacks on the Muslim religion, and his war on the media, Fox News exempted.  What’s different now is Trump’s willingness to bow to a foreign adversary while
disparaging and fighting with our allies – the countries that have stood with us and behind us throughout the post-war era.  No American should forget European members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) came to our aid after September 11, 2001.


Yet, before he went to Finland and groveled next to Putin, there was Trump picking fights with Germany, Great Britain, and other NATO members.  He even audaciously labeled the European Union our “foe.”  Trump behaves as if he’d prefer helping Putin dissolve NATO, leaving the Russian President free to annex Eastern European states and perhaps even reconstitute the old Soviet Union, no doubt a goal of this ruthless ex-KGB agent.  Even if Putin can’t accomplish that, Trump has already helped him diminish the influence of the United States.  Some European countries say they can no longer depend on American leadership.


A TIME FOR ACTION: WHAT TO DO

As we’ve pointed out before in our blogs, the three of us don’t speak with one voice on many issues.  We are different people who, from time to time, express a variety of political positions and preferences.  Yes, we’re mostly Democrats, but we’re not the same kind of Democrat, and we don’t see every issue in partisan terms.  We think of ourselves as patriots and though we each live our patriotism differently, we put country before party.


Having said that, we acknowledge seeing only a partisan solution to the danger Donald Trump’s behavior poses to the country we love.  Ironically enough, in this circumstance, we take our cues from several Republicans.


Steve Schmidt ran John McCain’s 2008 Presidential campaign.  Schmidt has been,throughout his political career
a dedicated adherent to the Republican Party and the conservative movement.  He worked for George W. Bush and helped put two conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court. Schmidt now, however, advocates a vote for Democratic candidates in this fall’s mid-term elections as the only way to undo the grave damage he sees Trump doing to America.  Schmidt, at least for the moment, has withdrawn from the Republican Party and sees voting Democratic as the proper response to Trump’s behavior.  Columnist George F. Will, another prominent Republican voice of long standing influence, echoed similar sentiments, urging independents and non-Trump Republicans to vote in a way that will “substantially reduce” the size of the Republican caucus in Congress.


Schmidt and Will see the same thing we do.  Democratic control of the House would open the possibility – even the probability – of impeachment proceedings against Trump.  We wrote about the mechanisms of impeachment in June 2017, noting that process can’t start without Democrats holding the levers of power.


Even if Congress doesn’t remove Trump from office (imagining the two-thirds vote in the Senate required for conviction remains difficult), an impeachment inquiry could reign in Trump’s behavior.  Because House Republicans have stood so strongly behind him, his behavior has gone unchecked.  Democrats who oppose him in Congress sometimes seem like they’re howling in the wind.  Trump hasn’t had to respond to subpoenas, release tax returns, or answer for financial and policy excesses.  With Democrats in control of even one house of Congress, things will change.  That howling may soon resemble a pack of hungry wolves on the trail of a wounded animal.


We think it possible, in fact, Special Counsel Robert Mueller already has much of his case against Trump made.  Mueller, a smart Washington operative, knows putting out his report now, with Republicans remaining in control of the House where impeachment must begin, means that report would 
likely get relegated to the trash can.  If Mueller believes he can’t indict a sitting President, making impeachment the only remedy for Trump’s crimes, Mueller may well have decided he’ll wait and present his report to a more receptive audience.  We can’t imagine a more receptive audience than a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives.  That’s our dream and Trump’s worst nightmare.  


That’s what we think. Tell us what you think.