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Donald Trump's impotent tyranny

Rogue Valley

Lead or get out of the way
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Donald Trump's impotent tyranny

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8/10/20
Everything is a show with Donald Trump. He was never really a successful businessman — he just played one on TV. Now, as president, a similar pattern has emerged: Trump wants to perform the role of autocrat in front of TV cameras, but cannot or will not act effectively to protect the country from the economic and health challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. He's a Potemkin strongman. The latest example of this phenomenon came over the weekend. With the House and Senate hamstrung on a pandemic relief bill, President Trump announced he would act unilaterally. Trump's executive orders combined two paradoxical elements: overreach and impotence. Let's take overreach first. Trump's orders "attempt to wrest away some of Congress's most fundamental, constitutionally mandated powers — tax and spending policy." The Constitution plainly gives Congress, not the president, taxing and spending power. One Republican senator called Trump's orders "unconstitutional slop." But this isn't the first time Trump has tried to usurp the legislative branch's financial prerogatives: After his failed government shutdown at the start of 2019, he signed an emergency decree diverting defense funds to build his border wall with Mexico. The courts failure to act has given the president an opening for additional transgressions.

Perhaps the sidestepping of Congress and the Constitution would be understandable if Trump's acts would actually help Americans trying to survive the pandemic and its economic fallout. President Trump is undermining the constitutional order — again — but will probably have little to show for it. This is in keeping with his now-tedious habit of prizing appearance over substance and ratings over effective action, his love of claiming "total authority" while often leaving states and cities to their own devices as they battle the coronavirus. Trump's attempts at tyranny do nothing to solve the country's problems, but they do compound the crisis of American democracy. It's the worst of both worlds.

Trump's new actions are based on a highly dubious legal authority, do very little to help tens of millions of Americans those in need, and will have a negligible effect on the moribund economy.

To make matters even worse, Trump is trampling on the Constitution in order to deliver such meager assistance. Rather than substance, illusion is king in Trump's Potemkin world.
 
Don't forget, unfortunately, if there is any place in the world where an ignorant nitwit coward would have a chance to become a tyrant it would be the U.S.A.
 
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