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Trump is doing more than just end runs around the Constitution, he openly even lies about what it says in terms of the powers of his own office. But he doesn't care. One of his aims is to discredit a free press in the USA. When the press has cited his inability to do this or that under the Constitution, Trump's response has often enough been to make an end run, or attempt to do so, using the flexibility often afforded the occupant of our highest elective office, and then brag about it later if it succeeds.You'd think the Republican members of Congress would join Democrats on principle and take exception to this behavior, but they've applauded from the sidelines in most cases, choosing to disregard the fact that what's good for the goose is good for the gander, and that a President of the other major party (or some third party?) may someday take one of those actions as precedent and apply it for his or her own benefit.The Rs will doubtless make a federal case out of the first time a Democrat in the Oval Office decides to "pull a Trump" in making some extra-Constitutional maneuver. But for most of four years they've been Trump sycophants at the expense of the reputation of their own party. When Trump is finally out of office and these guys step back to have a look at their track record --and after all you need a track record in normal times to win elections-- they'll be appalled at what they have let happen in the name of currying the favor of a President. A lot of it will not look very grand when featured in ads by their political opponents. Even less so to Americans as some of the downside of all those deregulatory excesses kicks in down the road. There's no way the Dems are going to miss the chance to point out where those insults and injuries stemmed from.
Trump is doing more than just end runs around the Constitution, he openly even lies about what it says in terms of the powers of his own office. But he doesn't care. One of his aims is to discredit a free press in the USA. When the press has cited his inability to do this or that under the Constitution, Trump's response has often enough been to make an end run, or attempt to do so, using the flexibility often afforded the occupant of our highest elective office, and then brag about it later if it succeeds.
You'd think the Republican members of Congress would join Democrats on principle and take exception to this behavior, but they've applauded from the sidelines in most cases, choosing to disregard the fact that what's good for the goose is good for the gander, and that a President of the other major party (or some third party?) may someday take one of those actions as precedent and apply it for his or her own benefit.
The Rs will doubtless make a federal case out of the first time a Democrat in the Oval Office decides to "pull a Trump" in making some extra-Constitutional maneuver. But for most of four years they've been Trump sycophants at the expense of the reputation of their own party. When Trump is finally out of office and these guys step back to have a look at their track record --and after all you need a track record in normal times to win elections-- they'll be appalled at what they have let happen in the name of currying the favor of a President. A lot of it will not look very grand when featured in ads by their political opponents. Even less so to Americans as some of the downside of all those deregulatory excesses kicks in down the road. There's no way the Dems are going to miss the chance to point out where those insults and injuries stemmed from.
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