Trump offers chilling glimpse into possible second term
Former President Donald Trump conjured a vision of a second term that would function as a tool of personal vengeance, and become even more authoritarian than his first, when he vowed to pardon US Capitol insurrectionists if he runs for the White House again and wins.
His pledge at a Texas rally Saturday was
accompanied by a call for demonstrations if prosecutors in New York,
who are probing Trump's business practices, and those in Georgia,
looking into his attempts to reverse his election loss in the state, do
anything that he defined as wrong or illegal. The comments underscore
Trump's obsession with delusional lies that he won the 2020 election,
and his determination to put that falsehood at the core of the
Republican worldview. As was often the case during his four years in
office, Trump's pardons threat shows that he still makes no distinction
between his personal goals and the national interest or rule of law.
But
the former President's new rhetorical outburst also at times hinted at
concern with his own legal position, and comes at a moment when various
criminal and congressional lines of investigation seem to be tightening
around him. The House select committee probing the January 6, 2021 riot has now penetrated deep inside Trump's West Wing inner circle, and he lost a Supreme Court
bid to keep key documents secret. The likelihood of a damning
accounting from the committee, bristling with new details about Trump's
attempt to destroy American democracy, is growing, though the GOP has
sought to thwart it at every turn.
As
well as further threatening US democracy on Saturday night, Trump was
preoccupied with his personal legal exposure. He fired off a wild
attack, which looked to be racially-motivated, on two Black New York prosecutors investigating
whether his business empire deliberately falsified accounts to get
preferential treatment on loans and income taxes. He also alluded to
potential legal peril he's facing in Fulton County, Georgia, where
a Black district attorney has been granted a special grand jury to
examine his attempt to steal President Joe Biden's win in the state.
In a sign of the potential impact of Trump's incitement, District Attorney Fani Willis wrote to the FBI on Sunday
asking for an immediate risk assessment for the Fulton County
Courthouse and government buildings. She said that "security concerns
were escalated this weekend" by the former President's speech and added
that her office had already received "communications" from people
unhappy with the investigation before Trump's rally.
Trump's
pressure on investigators prompted Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who sits on the
House committee probing the insurrection, to warn that the ex-President
had issued a "call to arms."
"Calling
out for demonstrations if, you know, anything adverse, legally, happens
to him, is pretty extraordinary. And I think it's important to think
through what message is being sent," the California Democrat told CNN's
Pamela Brown on Sunday.
In
yet another sign of Trump's incessantly consuming inability to accept
his election loss, he issued a statement that same evening slamming
former Vice President Mike Pence for refusing his demands to overturn
the result of the democratic election in 2020, and falsely claimed that
the then-vice president had the power to do so.
With
Trump and his fans already referring to him as the 45th and the 47th
President, his fixation with the 2020 election may also represent a
growing problem for the Republican Party. In the midterm elections in
November and beyond, the GOP wants to build a case that Biden is weak,
flailing at home and abroad and has lost his grip on inflation. But
Trump, who wants to use the elections to demonstrate his hold on the GOP
grassroots, threatens to detract from that simple Republican message.
While the ex-President remains wildly popular with the "Make America
Great Again" crowd, his loss in 2020 poses the question of whether
Republicans -- and independents and suburban swing voters -- want to get
stuck forever in Trump's unhinged 2020 feedback loop. Some other
potential 2024 presidential candidates, like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis,
are meanwhile demonstrating that Trump's populist nationalism and
assault on what supporters view as liberal elites will be waged long
after the 45th President has left the scene.
Democrats failed in their attempt to make Trump the bogeyman in last year's Virginia gubernatorial election, when
Republican Glenn Youngkin kept his distance from the ex-President and
tapped into voter concerns about education, Covid exhaustion and rising
prices. But it will be an easier case for Democrats to make when Trump
is holding wild rallies in swing states and again makes himself the face
of the party in 2022, spreading his lies, spewing increasingly racist
rhetoric and behaving like an autocrat in waiting.
Trump's signals possible new abuse of power
Trump's
latest comment on pardons was in line with his attempt to whitewash the
truth of a day when his mob, incited at his Washington rally, invaded
the Capitol to try and disrupt the certification of Biden's win, beat up
police officers and sent lawmakers running for their lives. Throughout
his presidency, he used the chief executive's pardon power to shield his
political cronies.
"If
I run and if I win, we will treat those people from January 6 fairly.
We will treat them fairly," Trump said on Saturday. "And if it requires
pardons, we will give them pardons. Because they are being treated so
unfairly."
People
dragged into the criminal justice system because they tried to stage a
coup based on lies about a stolen election are not being treated
unfairly. But it is characteristic of Trump's democracy-threatening
brand of politics to play up a sense of grievance and victimhood. He
spent four years of his twice-impeached presidency sowing a narrative
that opponents and subordinates who tried to check him were in fact the
ones guilty of abusing power. And he repeatedly sought to force the
Justice Department to embrace his anti-constitutional schemes.
Several
high-profile Republicans quickly dismissed Trump's offer to help
January 6 insurrectionists. New Hampshire Republican Gov. Chris Sununu,
who disappointed the national party by passing on a Senate bid, said on Sunday
that those responsible for the insurrection must be held accountable.
Asked by CNN's Dana Bash on "State of the Union" about the possibility
of a pardon for such Trump supporters, Sununu, who is emerging as a
standard bearer for a possible post-Trump GOP, said: "Of course not. Oh
my goodness, no."
One
of Trump's closest enablers, Sen. Lindsey Graham, also dismissed
Trump's promise in an appearance on CBS's "Face the Nation" on Sunday.
"I think it's inappropriate. I don't want to reinforce that defiling the
Capitol was okay. I don't want to do anything that would make this more
likely in the future," the South Carolina Republican said. His comments
were notable since he has previously warned that the GOP needs to find a
way to work with Trump if it wants to wield power. Another Republican
senator, Susan Collins of Maine, also condemned Trump's remarks. "I do
not think ... President Trump should have made that pledge to do
pardons. We should let the judicial process proceed. January 6 was a
dark day in our history," said Collins, who just won reelection in 2020,
speaking on ABC's "This Week." She also said it was "very unlikely"
that she would support Trump if he does officially decide on a third
presidential run.
This
must have been a case of déjà vu for Republicans who often had their
talking points overshadowed by the ex-President's extremism when he was
in power. But it is one thing for key Republicans to criticize the
ex-President now. On every previous occasion when the GOP faced a choice
between appeasing Trump to keep or win power and standing up for
American democracy and the rule of law, it has chosen the first option.
In a sense, Trump's demagoguery this weekend was a fresh sign that he is
convinced that his personality cult still holds his party in thrall.
The
House Republican conference has already demonstrated that it would act
as a vessel of Trump's power and vengeance if it wins the majority in
November. Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has put the ex-President at the
center of his efforts to become speaker of the House and has been put
on notice by pro-Trump members like Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene
that departures from the ex-President's dogma could doom his hopes. And
former Speaker Newt Gingrich encapsulated the
extremism of the House GOP when he suggested last week that a new
majority should throw members of the January 6 committee in jail.
Trump fires off racist attack on New York prosecutors
The
ex-President's speech was also notable for an extraordinary assault on
prosecutors in New York who are investigating allegations of fraud at
his business empire. The ex-President called for "the biggest protests
we have ever had" if the prosecutors "do anything wrong or illegal." New
York Attorney General Letitia James and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr.
are both leading investigations into Trump's business empire. And both
are Black, a point that Trump hinted at in his complaints about his
treatment.
"These
prosecutors are vicious, horrible people. They're racists and they're
very sick -- they're mentally sick," he said. "They're going after me
without any protection of my rights from the Supreme Court or most other
courts. In reality, they're not after me, they're after you," he told
his crowd.
It
was the second recent occasion when Trump has sought to stir up racial
hatred as part of his increasingly dangerous rhetoric. He claimed at a
rally in Arizona two weeks ago that White people could not get Covid-19
treatment or vaccines in New York, grossly distorting a policy that says
that race should be one factor in the use of limited therapies for a
disease that disproportionately affects Black and Hispanic populations.
Trump's
speech once again presented a conundrum about how much attention should
be paid to an ex-President who is using his high profile to stir
division and outrage in order to stay politically relevant. Yet given
his power in the Republican Party and the intensity of those who follow a
once and possible future President who has already incited a coup to
overthrow an election, it would be unwise to ignore the implications of
his rage.
Even
out of office, Trump has convinced millions of Americans that the
election was stolen and Biden is an illegitimate president. Multiple
Republican-run states have passed laws that make it harder to vote and
easier for political officials to interfere in election results rooted
in his false claims of voter fraud. And Trump is touring the country
inciting polarization and racial animus as the hot favorite for the GOP
2024 nomination.
John
Dean, a former White House counsel to President Richard Nixon in the
Watergate scandal, condemned Trump's remarks on pardons in a chilling tweet.
"This
is beyond being a demagogue to the stuff of dictators. He is defying
the rule of law. Failure to confront a tyrant only encourages bad
behavior," Dean wrote. "If thinking Americans don't understand what
Trump is doing and what the criminal justice system must do we are all
in big trouble!"
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