Trump Is Not the Problem
His election is the consequence of a crisis that’s
been brewing for a long time.
August 8, 2017
Like it
or not, the president of the United States embodies America itself. The
individual inhabiting the White House has become the preeminent symbol of who
we are and what we represent as a nation and a people. In a fundamental sense,
he is us. It was not always so. Millard Fillmore, the 13th president
(1850–1853), presided over but did not personify the American republic. He was
merely the federal chief executive. Contemporary observers did not refer to his
term in office as the Age of Fillmore. With occasional exceptions, Abraham
Lincoln in particular, much the same could be said of Fillmore’s successors.
They brought to office low expectations, which they rarely exceeded. So when
Chester A. Arthur (1881–1885) or William Howard Taft (1909–1913) left the White
House, there was no rush to immortalize them by erecting gaudy shrines—now
known as “presidential libraries”—to the glory of their presidencies. In those
distant days, ex-presidents went back home or somewhere else where they could
find work.
Over the
course of the past century, all that has changed. Ours is a republic that has
long since taken on the trappings of a monarchy, with the president inhabiting
rarefied space as our king-emperor. The Brits have their woman in Buckingham
Palace. We have our man in the White House.
Nominally,
the Constitution assigns responsibilities and allocates prerogatives to three
co-equal branches of government. In practice, the executive branch enjoys
primacy. Prompted by a seemingly endless series of crises since the Great Depression
and World War II, presidents have accumulated ever-greater authority, partly
through usurpation, but more often than not through forfeiture.
At the
same time, they also took on various extraconstitutional responsibilities. By
the beginning of the present century, Americans took it for granted that the
occupant of the Oval Office should function as prophet, moral philosopher,
style setter, interpreter of the prevailing zeitgeist, and—last but hardly
least—celebrity in chief. In short, POTUS was the bright star at the center of
the American solar system.
As
recently as a year ago, few saw in this cult of the presidency cause for
complaint. On odd occasions, some particularly egregious bit of executive
tomfoolery might trigger grumbling about an “imperial presidency.” Yet rarely did such complaints lead to
effective remedial action. The War Powers
Resolution of 1973 might be considered the exception that proves the
rule. Inspired by the disaster of the Vietnam War and intended to constrain
presidents from using force without congressional buy-in and support, that
particular piece of legislation ranks alongside the Volstead Act
of 1919(enacted to enforce Prohibition) as among the least effective
ever to become law.
In truth,
influential American institutions—investment banks and multinational
corporations, churches and universities, big =city newspapers and TV networks,
the bloated national-security apparatus and both major political parties—have
found reason aplenty to endorse a system that elevates the president to the
status of demigod. By and large, it’s been good for business, whatever that
business happens to be.
Furthermore,
it’s our president—not some foreign dude—who is, by common consent, the
most powerful person in the universe. For inhabitants of a nation that considers
itself both “exceptional” and “indispensable,” this seems only right and
proper. So Americans generally like it that their president is the
acknowledged Leader of the Free World rather than some fresh-faced pretender
from France or Canada.
Then came
the Great Hysteria. Arriving with a Pearl Harbor–like shock, it erupted on the
night of November 8, 2016, just as the news that Hillary Clinton was losing
Florida and appeared certain to lose much else besides became apparent.
Suddenly,
all the habits and precedents that had contributed to empowering the modern
American presidency no longer made sense. That a single deeply flawed
individual along with a handful of unelected associates and family members
should be entrusted with determining the fate of the planet suddenly seemed the
very definition of madness.
Emotion-laden
upheavals producing behavior that is not entirely rational are hardly unknown
in the American experience. Indeed, they recur with some frequency. The Great
Awakenings of the 18th and early 19th centuries are examples of the phenomenon. So also
are the two Red Scares of the 20th century, the first in the early 1920s and the second, commonly known as “McCarthyism,” coinciding with the
onset of the Cold War.
Yet the
response to Donald Trump’s election, combining as it has fear, anger,
bewilderment, disgust, and something akin to despair, qualifies as an upheaval
without precedent. History itself had seemingly gone off the rails. The crude
Andrew Jackson’s 1828 ousting of an impeccably pedigreed president, John Quincy
Adams, was nothing compared to the vulgar Donald Trump’s defeat of an
impeccably credentialed graduate of Wellesley and Yale who had served as first
lady, United States senator, and secretary of state. A self-evidently
inconceivable outcome—all the smart people agreed on that point—had somehow
happened anyway.
Read more at https://www.thenation.com/article/trump-is-not-the-problem/
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