A Trump Bombshell Quietly Dropped And It Should Shock Us All.
By Robert Reich
We’ve become so
inured to Donald Trump’s proto-fascism that we barely blink an eye when we
learn that he tried to manipulate the 2020 election. Yet the most recent
revelation should frighten every American to their core.By Clay Bennett
On July 30, the
House oversight committee released notes
of a 27 December telephone call from Trump to then acting attorney general
Jeffrey Rosen, in which Trump told Rosen: “Just say the election was corrupt +
leave the rest to me and the R congressmen.” The notes were taken by Richard
Donoghue, Rosen’s deputy, who was also on the call.
The release of
these notes has barely made a stir. The weekend news was filled with more
immediate things – infrastructure! The Delta strain! Inflation! Wildfires! In
light of everything else going on, Trump’s bizarre efforts in the last weeks of
his presidency seem wearily irrelevant. Didn’t we already know how desperate he
was?
In a word, no.
This revelation is hugely important.
Rosen obviously
rejected Trump’s request. But what if Rosen had obeyed Trump and said to the American
public that the election was corrupt – and then “left the rest” to Trump and
the Republican congressmen? What would Trump’s and the Republicans’ next moves
have been? And which Republican congressmen were in cahoots with Trump in this
attempted coup d’état?
Make no mistake:
this was an attempted coup.
Trump knew it. Just weeks earlier, then attorney general William Barr said the justice department had found no evidence of widespread fraud that could have overturned the results.
And a few days
after Trump’s call to Rosen – on 2 January – Trump told Brad Raffensperger,
Georgia’s secretary of state, to “find” votes to change the election outcome.
He berated Raffensperger for not doing more to overturn the election.
Emails released
last month also show that Trump and his allies in the last weeks of his
presidency pressured the justice department to investigate totally
unsubstantiated claims of widespread election fraud – forwarding them
conspiracy theories and even a draft legal brief they hoped would be filed with
the supreme court.
Some people,
especially Republican officeholders, believe we should simply forget these
sordid details. We must not.
For the first
time in the history of the United States we did not have a peaceful transition
of power. For the first time in American history, a president refused – still
refuses – to concede, and continues to claim, with no basis in fact, that the
election was “stolen” from him. For the first time in history, a president
actively plotted a coup.
It would have
been bad enough were Trump a mere crackpot acting on his own pathetic stage – a
would-be dictator who accidentally became president and then, when he lost
re-election, went bonkers – after which he was swept into the dustbin of
history.
We might then
merely regret this temporary lapse in American presidential history. At best,
Trump would be seen as a fool and the whole affair an embarrassment to the
country.
But Trump was no accident and he’s not in any dustbin. He has turned one of America’s two major parties into his own cult. He has cast the major political division in the US as a clash between those who believe him about the 2020 election and those who do not.
He has emboldened state Republicans to execute the most brazen attack
on voting rights since Jim Crow. Most Republican senators and representatives
dare not cross him. Some of his followers continue to threaten violence against
the government. By all accounts, he is running for president again in 2024.
Donald Trump’s
proto-fascism poses the largest internal threat to American democracy since the
civil war.
What to do about
it? Fight it, and the sooner the better.
This final
revelation – Trump’s 27 December call to the acting attorney general in which
he pleads “Just say the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me” – should
trigger section 3 of the 14th amendment, which bars anyone from holding office
who “engaged in insurrection” against the US. The current attorney general of
the United States, Merrick Garland, should issue an advisory opinion clearly
stating this. If Trump wants to take it to the supreme court, fine.
Robert Reich's latest book is "THE SYSTEM: Who Rigged
It, How To Fix It." He is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the
University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center. He
served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time
Magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the
twentieth century. He has written 17 other books, including the best sellers
"Aftershock," "The Work of Nations," "Beyond
Outrage," and "The Common Good." He is a founding editor of the
American Prospect magazine, founder of Inequality Media, a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning
documentaries "Inequality For All," streaming on YouTube, and
"Saving Capitalism," now streaming on Netflix.