By Robert Reich
The demise of the
Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act is hardly the end of the
story. Donald Trump will not let this loss stand.
Since its inception
in 2010, Republicans made the Affordable Care Act into a symbol of
Obama-Clinton overreach – part of a supposed plot by liberal elites to expand
government, burden the white working class, and transfer benefits to poor
blacks and Latinos.
Ever the political
opportunist, Trump poured his own poisonous salt into this festering wound.
Although he never really understood the Affordable Care Act, he used it to prey upon resentments of class, race, ethnicity, and religiosity that propelled him into the White House.
Although he never really understood the Affordable Care Act, he used it to prey upon resentments of class, race, ethnicity, and religiosity that propelled him into the White House.
Repealing
“Obamacare” has remained one of Trump’s central rallying cries to his
increasingly angry base.
“The question for
every senator, Democrat or Republican, is whether they will side with
Obamacare’s architects, which have been so destructive to our country, or with
its forgotten victims,” Trump said last Monday, adding that any senator who
failed to vote against it “is telling America that you are fine with the
Obamacare nightmare.”
Now, having lost
that fight, Trump will try to subvert the Act by delaying subsidies so some
insurance companies won’t be able to participate, failing to enforce the
individual mandate so funding won’t be adequate, not informing those who are
eligible about when to sign up and how to do so, and looking the other way when
states don’t comply.
But that’s not all.
Trump doesn’t want his base to perceive him as a loser.
So be prepared for scorched-earth politics from the Oval Office, including more savage verbal attacks on Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, more baseless charges of voter fraud in the 2016 election, and further escalation of the culture wars.
Most Americans won’t
be swayed by these pyrotechnics because they’ve become inured to our unhinged
president.
But that’s not the
point. They’ll be intended to shore up Trump’s “base” – the third of the
country that supports him, who still believe they’re “victims” of Obamacare,
who continue to believe Trump himself is the victim of a liberal conspiracy to
unseat him.
Trump wants his base
to become increasingly angry and politically mobilized, so
they’ll continue to exert an outsized influence on the Republican Party.
There is a deeper
danger here. As Harvard political scientist Archon Fung has argued, stable
democracies require that citizens be committed to the rule of law even if they
fail to achieve their preferred policies.
Settling our
differences through ballots and agreed-upon processes rather than through force
is what separates democracy from authoritarianism.
But Donald Trump has
never been committed to the rule of law. For him, it’s all about winning. If he
can’t win through established democratic processes, he’ll mobilize his base to
change them.
Trump is already
demanding that Mitch McConnell and senate Republicans obliterate the
filibuster, thereby allowing anything to be passed with a bare majority.
Last Saturday he
tweeted “Republican Senate must get rid of 60 vote NOW!” adding the filibuster
“allows 8 Dems to control country,” and “Republicans in the Senate will NEVER
win if they don’t go to a 51 vote majority NOW. They look like fools and are
just wasting time.”
What’s particularly
worrisome about Trump’s attack on the long-established processes of our
democracy is that his assault comes at a time when the percentage of Americans
who regard the other party as a fundamental threat is growing.
In 2014 – even
before acrimony of 2016 presidential campaign – 35 percent of Republicans saw
the Democratic Party as a “threat to the nation’s well being” and 27 percent of
Democrats regarded Republicans the same way, according to the Pew Research
Center.
Those percentages
are undoubtedly higher today. If Trump succeeds, they’ll be higher still.
Anyone who regards
the other party as a threat to the nation’s well-being is less apt to accept
outcomes in which the other party prevails – whether it’s a decision not to
repeal the Affordable Care Act, or even the outcome of a presidential election.
As a practical
matter, when large numbers of citizens aren’t willing to accept such outcomes,
we’re no longer part of the same democracy.
I fear this is where
Trump intends to take his followers, along with much of the Republican Party:
Toward a rejection of political outcomes they regard as illegitimate, and
therefore a rejection of democracy as we know it.
That way, Trump will
always win.
ROBERT B.
REICH is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of
California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing
Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for
which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries
of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including the best
sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and "Beyond
Outrage," and, his most recent, "Saving Capitalism." He is also
a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause,
a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the
award-winning documentary, INEQUALITY FOR ALL.