A YEAR WITHOUT A PRESIDENT
To
watch this video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOGTLvxEKMM
It seems like forever, but it was
just one year ago that Donald Trump was elected president [by the Electoral College]. So what have we
learned about the presidency and who is running the country?
1. The first big thing we’ve learned is that Trump is not really
the president of the United States – because he’s not governing.
A president who’s governing doesn’t
blast his Attorney General for doing his duty and recusing himself from an FBI
investigation of the president.
A president who’s governing doesn’t
leave the top echelons of departments and agencies empty for almost a year.
He doesn’t publicly tell his
Secretary of State he’s wasting time trying to open relations with North Korea.
Any president with the slightest interest in governing would already know and
approve of what his Secretary of State was doing.
He doesn’t fire half his key White
House staff in the first nine months, creating utter chaos.
A president who is governing works
with his cabinet and staff to develop policy.
He doesn’t just tweet new public policy out of the blue – for example, that transgender people can’t serve in the military. His Secretary of Defense is likely to have some thoughts on the matter – and if not consulted might decide to ignore the tweet.
He doesn’t just tweet new public policy out of the blue – for example, that transgender people can’t serve in the military. His Secretary of Defense is likely to have some thoughts on the matter – and if not consulted might decide to ignore the tweet.
He doesn’t just decide to withdraw
from the Paris Accord without any reason or analysis.
A president who is governing works with Congress. He doesn’t just punt to Congress hard decisions – as he did with DACA, the Iran nuclear deal, insurance subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, and details of his tax plan.
He doesn’t tell a crowd of
supporters that he’s ended the Clean Power Plan – “Did you see what I did to
that? Boom, gone” – when any such repeal requires a legal process, and must
then withstand court challenges.
Instead of governing, Donald Trump
has been insulting, throwing tantrums, and getting even:
Equating white supremacists with
people who protest against them. Questioning the patriotism of NFL players who
are peacefully protesting police violence and racism.
Making nasty remarks about
journalists, about his predecessor as president, his political opponent in the
last election, national heroes like Congressman John Lewis and Senator John
McCain, even the mayor of San Juan Puerto Rico.
Or he’s busy lying and then covering
up the lies. Claiming he would have won the popular vote if millions hadn’t
voted fraudulently for his opponent – without a shred of evidence to support
his claim, and then setting up a fraudulent commission to find the evidence.
Or firing the head of the FBI who
wouldn’t promise to be more loyal to him than to the American public.
A president’s job is to govern.
Trump doesn’t know how to govern, or apparently doesn’t care. So, logically,
he’s not President.
2. The second thing we’ve learned is that Trump’s influence is
waning.
Since he lost the popular vote, his
approval ratings have dropped even further. One year in, Trump is the least
popular president in history with only 37 percent of Americans behind him.
Most Republicans still approve of
him, but that may not be for long.
He couldn’t get his pick elected to
a Senate primary in Alabama, a state bulging with Trump voters.
Republican senators refused to go
along with his repeal of the Affordable Care Act. And they’re taking increased
interest in Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.
Business leaders deserted him over
his remarks over Charlottesville. They vacated his business advisory councils.
NFL owners have turned on him over
his remarks about players. Tom Brady, who once called Trump “a good friend,”
now calls him “divisive” and “wrong.”
There’s no question he’s violated
the Constitution.
There are at least three grounds for impeachment – his violation of the emoluments clause of the Constitution by raking in money from foreign governments, his obstruction of justice by firing the head of the FBI, and his failure to faithfully execute the law by not implementing the Affordable Care Act.
And a fourth if he or his aides colluded with Russia in the 2016 election.
There are at least three grounds for impeachment – his violation of the emoluments clause of the Constitution by raking in money from foreign governments, his obstruction of justice by firing the head of the FBI, and his failure to faithfully execute the law by not implementing the Affordable Care Act.
And a fourth if he or his aides colluded with Russia in the 2016 election.
But both houses of Congress would
have to vote for his removal, which won’t happen unless Democrats win control
in 2018 or Republicans in Congress decide Trump is a political liability.
3. The third big thing we’ve learned is where the governing of the
country is actually occurring.
Much is being done by lobbyists for
big business, who now swarm over the Trump administration like honey bees over
a hedgerow of hollyhocks.
But the real leadership of
America is coming from outside the Trump administration.
Leadership on the environment is now
coming from California – whose rules every automaker and many other
corporations have to meet in order to sell in a state that’s home to one out of
eight Americans.
Leadership on civil rights is coming
from the federal courts, which have struck down three different versions of
Trump’s travel ban, told states their voter ID laws are unconstitutional, and
pushed police departments to stop profiling and harassing minorities.
Leadership on the economy is coming
from the Federal Reserve Board, whose decisions on interest rates are more
important than ever now that the country lacks a fiscal policy guided by the
White House.
Most of the rest of leadership in
America is now coming from the grassroots – from people all over the country
who are determined to reclaim our democracy and make the economy work for the
many rather than the few.
They stopped Congress from repealing
the Affordable Care Act.
They’re fighting Education Secretary
Betsy DeVos’s plan to spend taxpayer money on for-profit schools and colleges
that cheat their students.
They’re fighting EPA director Scott
Pruitt’s crusade against climate science.
And Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s
attempts to tear down the wall between church and state.
They’re fighting against the biggest
tax cut for the wealthy in American history – that will be paid for by
draconian cuts in services and dangerous levels of federal debt.
They’re fighting against the
bigotry, racism, and xenophobia that Trump has unleashed.
And they’re fighting for a Congress
that, starting with next year’s midterm elections, will reverse everything
Trump is doing to America.
But their most important effort
– your effort, our effort – is not just
resisting Trump. It’s laying the groundwork for a new politics in America, a
new era of decency and social justice, a reassertion of the common good.
Millions are already mobilizing and
organizing. It’s the one good thing that’s happened since Election Day last
year – the silver lining on the dark Trump cloud.
If you’re not yet part of it, join
up.
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.