Source: Organizing Upgrade
The United States is fast approaching a tipping point. Consider the following:
- AĀ coordinated mobilizationĀ of armed militias threatens elected officials in Democratic states, with open White House backing;
- The most powerful member of the national legislatureĀ interferes in judicial appointmentsĀ to gain his party permanent dominance over this branch of government;
- A top official who has admitted his guilt in a major breach of national security isĀ released from prosecutionĀ by the nationās chief judicial officer.
These attacks on democratic norms should have rung every alarm we have. But more than three years of Trumpās transgressions have numbed much of the progressive base. The steps outlined above document a clear and present danger:Ā whatever `democracyā we have acquired, through enormous struggle, is now on the line.
Tranny by Another Name
For good reason, many people will snort at the notion that the U.S. has ever lived up to the core premises of liberal democracy: the rule of law applied equally to all citizens; majority rule through free and fair elections. As the author ofĀ āWhy the United States is Not a True Democracy, Parts 1 and 2,āĀ I can hardly disagree! Majorities do not rule in this country. Basic citizenship rights, whether the right to vote or to be secure in oneās own person, are routinely violated by local and state governments.
But it could get much worse if Trump wins again. In a second Trump administration, with Republicans controlling the Senate and the federal court system, it is more than possible that the U.S. will move sharply towardsĀ illiberal democracy.
āIlliberal Democracyā is not a play on words. It is the self-description for a new model of authoritarian governance sweeping large parts of the world, from India (soon to be first in the world in population) to Brazil, Turkey, Russia, and a brace of central and eastern European states (Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary).
In an illiberal democracy, a temporary electoral majority uses its grip on power to subvert the main institutions of the state and civil society: the independent media; the judiciary; the police. All the while, a faƧade of electoral democracy is maintained, with multi-party elections, a parliament that meets and debates, and some toleration of dissent. But the essence of democratic rule is regularly violated.
In each of these cases, the winning party has polarized popular sentiment via appeals to xenophobic, nativist, religious, and ethno-racial phobias. Muslims are the target in India, Roma in Hungary, Jews and LGBT people in Poland, the indigenous in Brazil, Kurds in Turkey, a full rainbow of āforeign,ā mostly non-white peoples in the U.S. and Russia.
Here are a few examples.
InĀ India, Narendra Modiās BJP government has incited pogroms against Muslims, stripped citizenship from millions of non-Hindus, and intimidated the press into sycophantic adoration, all while winning elections.
InĀ Turkey, Recip Erdoganās AKP regime dominates the judicial system and routinely jails journalists, while Erdogan and his family own 90% of the media outlets.
InĀ Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro presides over a ādeath squad democracy,ā giving a green light to groups that murder indigenous and Afro-descended Brazilians in rural areas, while urban police and militias kill at will inĀ favelas.
InĀ Russia, Vladimir Putinās government controls all the electronic media, disappears critical journalists at home, assassinates opponents abroad, and changes the constitution as Putin sees fit, to maintain his grip on power.
InĀ Hungary, the Fidesz Party controlling parliament has granted Prime Minister Victor Orban unlimited authority to rule by decree.
InĀ Poland, Jaroslaw Kaczynski ās Law and Justice Party has systematically attacked the entire judicial system, using the state media to harass any judge who disagrees.
What Might It Look Like Here?
Pundits, scholars, and activists have sketchedĀ many bad thingsĀ that could happen if Trump wins in November. But most of those scenarios presume the basic legal structures of the U.S. state continue to function, even if under Republican rule they are temporarily skewed.
My presumption is different. I think those structures will be pulverized and a fundamentally lawless regime will set about maintaining itself in power, while pretending to democratic norms.Ā Indeed, this assault on democracy is already happening. So far it is aimed mainly at people who are not Trump loyalists who hold some power: the Governor of Michigan or longtime officials in the so-called āDeep State,ā meaning the federal civil service. (The organized left is not yet significant enough to be high-priority targets on Trumpās to-do list, perhaps one reason some progressives do not fully understand the threat he poses).
In a second Trump Administration, I see this assault on democracy proceeding in four stages:
First, pack the judiciary. Second, plant loyalists in all decision-making posts in the larger state apparatus. Third, green light paramilitary violence. Fourth, seize control of the stateās monopoly on legitimate coercion via the police.
Keep in mind that implementing this progression does not require the popularly understood signs that a dictator has taken over: tanks in the streets and thousands jailed overnight. Trump likely would let theĀ New York TimesĀ continue publishing, and the formal mechanisms of parliamentary representation would continue. Old-guard Democrats would remain in Congress and state houses, because their impotent voices would legitimize rule by a Republican Party committed to staying in power by any means necessary.
The attack on the democratic gains of the 1960s ā in particular, voting rights for African Americans ā began long before Trump. Republicans recognized decades ago that changing demographics would make it less and less likely that a party anchored in overt white supremacy could win many victories in a genuine one-person, one-vote system. GOP gains in voter suppression are part of the reason Trump was able to win in 2016. Since his inauguration, attacks on voting rights have increased, and a second Trump term promises much worse.
An Independent Judiciary No Longer
Nearly everyone alive today grew up believing that the federal judiciary would either extend rights, or at least guarantee them against erosion.Ā Even as the Burger, Rehnquist, and now Roberts Supreme Courts turned ever more rightward, the precedents set by the Warren Court in 1953-1969 were presumed to hold, in part because new rights were occasionally added, as specific gay and lesbian rights were inĀ Lawrence v. TexasĀ (2003) andĀ Obergefell v. HodgesĀ (2015). Ā The 1980s and after rulings that enabled racialized mass incarceration largely escaped notice, so that by the time Michelle AlexanderāsĀ The New Jim CrowĀ appeared in 2011, the damage was already done.
Shelby v. HolderĀ in 2013, which ruled key parts of the 1965 Voting Rights Act unconstitutional, and the 2019Ā Rucho v. Common CauseĀ ruling that āPartisan gerrymandering claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courtsā were massive setbacks. The Courtās April 2020 refusal to block Wisconsin Republicansā attempted mass disfranchisement clarifies that we are in the middle of a judicial counter-revolution.
We now have a Court like those which permitted Jim Crowās apparatus of repression, violence, and disfranchisement from the 1870s to the 1940s. In that era, the Fourteenth Amendmentās guarantees of equal protection and due process explicitly did not apply to the states. As long as poll taxes and literacy tests were nominally nonracial, they were permitted; similarly, in the 21stĀ century, we can expect that āvoter identificationā laws, purges of voter rolls, and gerrymanders will be permitted under almost any circumstance.
In a second Trump administration, the Supreme Court, already under right-wing control, will be further undermined by threatened impeachment and forced retirement of the remaining liberal justices. That judicial purge will be extended to the entire federal bench, as signaled by Mitch McConnellĀ personally pressuring judgesĀ to retire so Trump can replace them. We should expect a scenario in which there is no possibility of judicial review or restraint, and the remaining independent judges are subjected to public and private intimidation.
That we have to consider this possibility suggests how far the process of āilliberalizationā has already moved. If Trump wins and McConnell consolidates his take-over of the federal bench, we move very far back to a world of constant quasi-legal repressionāgrand jury indictments, tax and fraud prosecutions, weaponizing the IRS against political groups and individual activists, a barrage of injunctions to block protests, strikes, and any effort by local and state governments to resist Trump.
Monopolizing the State
Since he was elected, Trump has steadily undermined structures of government that benefit ordinary people, whether the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Centers for Disease Control, the National Labor Relations Board, the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Education, and Labor, the National Park Service, or the Environmental Protection Agency. All the above have been corrupted for narrow partisan purposes.
The current attempts to destroy the Postal Service and politicize the United States Census, two of the success stories of American governance since the 1790s, are the most perverse illustrations of this larger attack.
Trumpās special targets, however, are those parts of the government that regulate and enforce laws domestically and abide by norms and agreements internationally. He has moved to turn the FBI, the Justice Department, the State Department, and the entire intelligence apparatus from institutions accountable to Congress (and hence on some issues forced to respond to popular pressure) into enforcers of his personal agenda. Even the military, formerly sacrosanct, has been humiliated by his overturning the court martials of war criminals like the SEAL āEddieā Gallagher.
Richard Nixon once attempted to move at least part way in this direction with his efforts to gain personal control of the FBI and CIA. But the terrain was different then, and he was beaten back. It was FBI Associate Director W. Mark Felt who acted as the Deep Throat informer to blow up Nixonās plans.
If Trump games the November election, the FBI will become Trumpās personal police, with the President acting as the new J. Edgar Hoover who led the Bureau from 1924 to 1972. Any individual or organization will be fair game for infiltration, disruption, suppression, and blackmail at the behest of the White House. Trumpās enemies in the Democratic Party, the press, and the state apparatus will likely be first-priority targets. More and more people will disappear from public life in a campaign of vengeance that will make Nixonās āenemies listā look small-scale. Once they have been knocked down, any kind of grassroots opposition by progressives will be next in line.
Gangs of Armed Men
The next possibility, signaling a descent into the tactics historically associated with fascism, would be outright political violence condoned from the top and hailed by his base. We have not seen that kind of politics since the routine floggings and killings of Black and white Republicans by Democrats during Reconstruction. Ā The Bundysā occupation of federal lands, the Nazi gangs marching through Charlottesville, and the mass gun-rights rallies at state capitols just before COVID-19 hit, featuring men in body armor with automatic weapons, are now escalating into armed parades in streets and legislative chambers.
We need to take these escalations seriously. Every day I get emails from websites likeĀ Conservative-Daily.comĀ calling Schumer and Pelosi ātraitors.ā Trump began his rise to power by suggesting that his opponent should be ālocked up.ā Last year he regularly stoked crowds chanting āSend Her Back!ā against Representative Ilhan Omar and the Squad, and last month he urged mobs to āliberateā their states.Ā How long before zealots act on that language, and give traitors what they deserve?
Welcome to a Privatized Police State!
Brutally violent, repressive policing, aimed directly at people of color and political dissenters, is a deep-rooted feature of U.S. society. But the systemic impact of that coercion has been curtailed by the dispersed structure of our policing system. AĀ nationalĀ paramilitary police force directed from the White House would be genuinely new, and extraordinarily dangerous.
This potential was signaled in February when Trump sent what is essentially a military unit, theĀ Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC), into sanctuary cities to work with ICE. Beyond that, what do you think will happen if ICE or FBI agents start arresting his most outspoken opponents? Would the New York or Chicago police departments disarm federal officers rounding up leftwing Black and Latino city council members and Members of Congress?
In this previously unimaginable scenario, Trump would appeal to the āthin blue lineā to come to his aid, and armed men in uniform would answer his call in the Blue states, while Red state governors and legislatures respond enthusiastically. At that point, it will not matter that there is no constitutional authority for a president seizing control of local police.
The Fork in the Road
We must stop hoping that the millions of Republicans who supported Trumpās opponents in 2016, and believe themselves to be law-abiding people, will object to an ever-more authoritarian government.Ā Of course, not every Republican is a hater or a permanent enemy. But their class interest and racial blindersāfunctionally the same thingāprecludes any rocking of the boat. They have gained greatly under him, and the consequences of admitting his increasing despotism, in terms of personal ruin and moral responsibility, would be very grave.
Here is the parallel from our history of authoritarian governments. For three-quarters of a century, the overwhelming majority of southern whites defended the Jim Crow system as natural and fitting. They ignored the racial terror deployed against their black neighbors, just as todayās Republicans avow how much they wish the President would stop tweeting, or not say such terrible things, or tone it down. They ādonāt agree with everything he does,ā but they will vote for him anyway. With a few exceptions like Mitt Romney and theĀ Lincoln Project, they insist the Emperor is wearing fine new clothes even though his gross old torso is naked in plain sight.
Given the real possibility of Trump winning again via votes suppressed and votes bought, just enough to take the Electoral College, we face a stark necessity. The majority must mass together to defeat Trump and crush Trumpism. We cannot stay where we are, we will move forward or we will move back. Democracy, all that we have fought for and not-yet achieved, is on the line.
Van Gosse is a Professor of History at Franklin & Marshall. After writing about the New Left “movement of movements” for some years, he now studies black politics between the Revolution and the Civil War. He has been active in peace and solidarity work since the 1980s (CISPES, Peace Action, United for Peace and Justice) and helped found Historians Against the War, now H-PAD, in 2003.
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2 Comments
I’ve been on here saying several times that voting Democrat is a waste of time if you want to help ordinary people. I stick by that – generally. However, at this time, I’m starting to change my mind. These are extraordinary times and exceptional circumstances. Trump and his gang are so rogue, so out of control, such a threat to ‘democracy’ (as much as it is) that it’s unthinkable to have a second Trump term and even a Wall Street-controlled capitaist Democrat adminstration is better – for now.
In the long term though, America is doomed and it’s going to take the rest of the world with it.
Dr. Van Gosse paints a dark picture. He does not seem to be exaggerating. What he is describing is in large part symptomatic of the “real” America that was born in native genocide, territorial wars, and landed aristocracy writing a constitution that protected power elites. Even if Trump is not re-elected, the future looks ominous, immensely challenging. It seems to me that a large part of this development has grown out of a culture of conquest and war that has corrupted whatever truly liberal and democratic ideals that have existed to some extend, but only at times partially defended and realized.