A New Age of Presidential Unilaterism?

Yves here. While this post usefully marks how Presidential mission creep, by Presidential design and Congressional neglect, accelerated starting in the W era, IMHO it goes light on some of the early Executive power grabs, in part by focusing solely on foreign policy matters. I am old enough to remember at the time that Nixon was called an imperial President, and a quick web search confirms that view:

Over the course of the 20th century, the presidency gradually supplanted Congress as the center of federal power. Presidential authority increased, presidential staffs grew in size, and the executive branch gradually acquired a dominant relationship over Congress….

No president went further than Richard Nixon in concentrating powers in the presidency. He refused to spend funds that Congress had appropriated; he claimed executive privilege against disclosure of information on administration decisions; he refused to allow key decision makers to be questioned before congressional committees; he reorganized the executive branch and broadened the authority of new cabinet positions without congressional approval; and during the Vietnam War, he ordered harbors mined and bombing raids launched without consulting Congress.

Watergate brought a halt to the “imperial presidency” and the growth of presidential power. Over the president’s veto, Congress enacted the War Powers Act (1973), which required future presidents to obtain authorization from Congress to engage U.S. forces in foreign combat for more than 90 days. Under the law, a president who orders troops into action abroad must report the reason for this action to Congress within 48 hours.

In the wake of the Watergate scandal, Congress passed a series of laws designed to reform the political process…

Some of the post-Watergate reforms have not been as effective as reformers anticipated. The War Powers Act has never been invoked. Campaign financing reform has not curbed the ability of special interests to curry favor with politicians or the capacity of the very rich to outspend opponents.

Similarly, the post is far too kind to Obama. It tries to gloss over his reversal of habeas corpus, a bedrock protection. It also ignores that he had promised to reverse the expansion of the surveillance state and then allowed its reach to continue to grow. That failure was what prompted Edward Snowden to engage in his famed exposure of the extent of US hoovering of its citizens’ data. Sadly, after a brief uproar, nothing changed.

The post does point out that even though Trump, due to his bull in the china shop tendencies, which most often attempted via executive order (many of which amounted to PR noise, since they had no legal effect), Biden went much further on that front.

As for Trump, he is sure to try to push the envelope of his authority. As Lambert sometimes pointed out, if Trump really were the reincarnation of Hitler, why were the Democrats so keen to hand more authority to Biden and/or be complacent about overreach (the vaccine mandate comes to mind) if there really was a clear and present danger in the 2024 election?

By Karen J. Greenberg. Originally published at TomDispatch

As the dust settles over election day, it’s worth reflecting that it’s not only the election results that have been at stake, but the future of the presidency and its powers. Over the course of the first quarter of this century, the American presidency has accumulated ever more power, rendering the office increasingly less constrained by either Congress or the courts. With Donald Trump’s reelection, the slide toward a dangerously empowered president has reached a moment of reckoning, particularly when it comes to foreign affairs and warfare.

Presidential Powers

Throughout American history, presidents have repeatedly sought to increase their powers, nowhere more so than in the context of war. As historian James Patterson has pointed out, “War and the threat of war were major sources of presidential power from the beginning.” Whether it was George Washington’s insistence that he was the one to formulate foreign policy when it came to diplomacy, treaties, and more; Thomas Jefferson’s assertion of complete control over whether or not to attack the Barbary Pirates; James Polk’s decision to take actions which risked war with Mexico; or Abraham Lincoln’s “sweeping assertions of authority” in the Civil War era, executive claims to authority when it comes to matters of foreign relations and warfare have been a persistent feature of American history.

The twentieth century saw a continued rise in the powers of the presidency. As historian Jeremi Suri noted in his book The Impossible Presidency, the four terms of Franklin D. Roosevelt were a transformative moment, essentially multiplying the responsibilities of the president with the ultimate goal of “mak[ing] the national executive the dominant actor in all parts of American life.” The presidents who followed Roosevelt continued to display such enhanced powers, especially when it came to foreign affairs. 

As legal scholar Matt Waxman has reminded us, FDR’s successor, Harry Truman, went to war in Korea without congressional authorization. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who did consult with Congress over the need to protect U.S.-allied Pacific coastal islands from possible Chinese aggression and, in his farewell address, warned against “the military-industrial complex,” still believed “that the president had broad powers to engage in covert warfare without specific congressional approval.” In fact, his successor, John F. Kennedy, exercised those powers in a major way in the Bay of Pigs incident. Richard Nixon unilaterally and secretly launched the invasion of Cambodia in 1970, and Ronald Reagan created a secret Central American foreign policy, while arranging the unauthorized transfer of funds and weaponry to the Nicaraguan rebels, the Contras, from the sale of U.S. arms to Iran, despite the fact that such funding was prohibited by an act of Congress, the Boland Amendment.

The Twenty-First Century

Even within the context of repeated presidential acts taken without congressional assent (or often even knowledge) and in defiance of the constitutional checks on the powers of the presidency, the twenty-first century witnessed a major uptick in claims of executive power. In the name of war, this century has seen an astonishing erosion of constraints on that very power, as Yale law professor Harold Hongju Koh details in his illuminating new book, The National Security Constitution in the Twenty-First Century.

At the dawn of this century, the attacks of September 11, 2001, led to an instant escalation of presidential power and executive unilateralism. In the name of national security, President George W. Bush issued an order that authorized the indefinite detention of prisoners in what quickly came to be known as the Global War on Terror. He also set up an offshore prison of injustice at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and authorized military commissions instead of federal court trials for terrorism suspects captured abroad.

Meanwhile, Congress and the courts consistently deferred to the will of the president when it came to actions taken in the name of that war on terror. One week after the attacks of 9/11, Congress passed the Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF), which undermined its own power in Article I of the Constitution to declare war and weakened its powers of restraint on presidential actions carefully articulated in the 1973 War Powers Resolution (WPR), passed to guard against the very kind of secretive engagement in war that Nixon had unilaterally authorized in the Vietnam era.

Now, turning their backs on the power given them by the Constitution and the WPR, Congress, with that AUMF, acceded to the expansion of presidential powers and opened the door to the disastrous wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere early in this century.  The president, it stated, was “authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations, or persons.”

In October 2001, Congress also passed the USA Patriot Act. It included an expansion of presidential power at home in the name of protecting the nation in the war on terror, including authorizing greatly expanded surveillance policies that would come to include, among other things, secret surveillance and searches that took place without evidence of wrongdoing, notably in Muslim communities in this country that were considered inherently suspect in the name of the war on terror.

As a result, when, in January 2009, Barack Obama entered the White House, his administration found itself with a strikingly expanded definition of the powers of the presidency on the table.

Obama’s Presidency

A former constitutional law professor, Barack Obama pledged to overturn some of the Bush administration’s most egregious, extralegal breaches, including the very existence of the Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility and the use of torture (or what the Bush administration had politely termed “enhanced interrogation techniques”) authorized by executive unilateralism as part of the war on terror. In what became known as “trust me” government, Obama also pledged to reform the excessive surveillance policies implemented in the war on terror. In 2013, David Cole, a civil rights attorney and currently the National Legal Director of the ACLU, credited Obama with making substantial “shifts” toward restraint by formally declaring an end to many of the Bush administration’s “most aggressive assertions of executive power.”

But while Obama did indeed trim some of the most striking excesses of the Bush era, his record of presidential reform fell significantly short. Jameel Jaffer, the founding director of the Knight First Amendment Institute, for instance, disputed Cole’s claims, citing the Obama administration’s continued reliance on illegal and extralegal policies that Bush’s aggressive actions had already put in play — among them, warrantless wiretapping, indefinite detention, and the military commissions to try prisoners at Guantánamo. In addition, as Jaffer pointed out, the Obama administration frequently relied on the powers granted the presidency in that 2001 AUMF to authorize targeted lethal drone strikes globally, as in the case of the drone-killing of U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki, without further congressional authorization, by expanding the definition of “imminence” in order to appear to be complying with the international rule of law.

When it came to such targeted killings — a military tactic introduced under President Bush but greatly expanded during the Obama years for strikes in Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen — the president reserved for himself the right to have the final say in authorizing such strikes. As the New York Times reported at the time, “Nothing else in Mr. Obama’s first term has baffled liberal supporters and confounded conservative critics alike as his aggressive counterterrorism record. His actions have often remained inscrutable, obscured by awkward secrecy rules, polarized political commentary, and the president’s own deep reserve.” 

Although he served as legal adviser to the Department of State in the Obama administration, in his warnings about the perils posed by the slide towards unilateral presidential powers, Harold Hongju Kou concedes that the president could have done more to curtail the Bush era enhancement of the powers of the president. “[T]he cautious Obama administration,” he writes, “succeeded in swinging the national security pendulum only part of the way back” to restraint on executive power via the courts and Congress. While the “cascade of illegality” that defined the Bush era’s war on terror was indeed somewhat addressed by Obama, it remained, Koh reminds us, “undercorrected” — including not seeking “stronger accountability for past acts of CIA torture, and the stubborn continuation of a Guantanamo detention policy.”

While President Obama adhered more closely to restraints on presidential power than his predecessor, his administration did not make the kinds of structural and procedural changes necessary to deter future presidents from following in the footsteps of the Bush administration, as we were soon to learn, since, as Koh points out, enhanced unilateral presidential and executive powers would be “sharply re-intensified” under Donald Trump.

The Trump Years

Indeed, the first Trump presidency vastly accelerated the claims of expanded presidential power. Jack Goldsmith and Bob Bauer, lawyers who worked in the Bush and Obama administrations, respectively, served, as they put it, “very different presidents” and hold “different political outlooks.” Yet they agree that the Trump administration took unchecked presidential authority to a new level. In their 2020 book, After Trump: Reconstructing the Presidency, they contended that “Donald Trump operated the presidency in ways that reveal its vulnerability to dangerous excesses of authority and dangerous weaknesses in accountability.”

And as they make all too clear, the stakes were (and remain) high. “The often-feckless Trump,” they wrote, “also revealed deeper fissures in the structure of the presidency that, we worry, a future president might choose to exploit in a fashion similar to Trump — but much more skillfully, and to even greater effect.” And with the Supreme Court’s recent decision upholding the immunity of Donald Trump for acts taken while in the Oval Office, the shackles that once tied presidential acts in wartime to Congressional authorization are arguably now fully off the table, should a president be determined to act on his or her own say-so. (As Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in her dissent, the ruling “will have disastrous consequences for the presidency and for our democracy,” arguing that it will, in essence, “let the President violate the law, let him exploit the trappings of his office for personal gain, let him use his official power for evil ends.”)

The Biden Years

When it comes to recognizing limits on presidential powers, President Biden has had a distinctly mixed record. He immediately withdrew Trump’s executive order known as “the Muslim ban,” set out to close Guantánamo (but has not yet succeeded in doing so), rejoined the Paris climate accord, and revived international ties around the world that had been disrupted by Trump. And yet, that quintessential institutionalist, who prided himself on his ability to work with Congress, nonetheless veered in the direction of presidential unilateralism in the conduct of foreign affairs.

As Professor Koh put it: “In foreign affairs, even the longtime senator Joe Biden — who widely proclaims his love of the Senate — now operates almost entirely by executive fiat,” including a reliance on “classified policy memoranda, with minimal congressional oversight.”  Overall, in fact, Biden issued more executive orders than any president since Richard Nixon. Though Biden wisely relied upon an interagency group of lawyers to advise him on national security decisions, following their advice, he issued “nonbinding political agreements, memoranda of understanding, joint communiques, and occasionally ‘executive agreements plus,’” just as Obama had done on the Paris climate accords and the Iran nuclear deal, relying on “preexisting legislative frameworks” rather than new Congressional authorizations. When it came to the war in Ukraine, Biden leaned heavily on “the coordinated use of sanctions, enhanced almost weekly post-invasion.” Most of those sanctions were set, as Koh also points out, “by executive orders and regulatory decrees,” rather than in consultation with Congress.

Our Future

A second Trump presidency will undoubtedly take unilateral presidential powers to a new level. After all, he already indicated that he might withdraw the U.S. from NATO and end support for Ukraine. Nor is Trump likely to be deterred by Congress. Reporting on Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation’s nearly 1,000-page prescription for a second Trump presidency, written primarily by former office holders in the first Trump administration, New York Times reporters Jonathan Swan, Charlie Savage, and Maggie Haberman reported that Trump “and his associates” plan to “increase the president’s authority over every part of the federal government that now operates, by either law or tradition, with any measure of independence from political interference by the White House.”

In particular, Project 2025’s stance on nuclear weapons is a reminder of just how dangerous a president who refused to be restrained by law or precedent will be. After all, in his first term in office, Trump unilaterally pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions on that country, leading its leaders to increase its nuclear capacity. Meanwhile, the march toward nuclear confrontation has accelerated worldwide. In response, Project 2025 argues for ramping up America’s nuclear arsenal yet more. “[T]he United States manifestly needs to modernize, adapt, and expand its nuclear arsenal,” the treatise declared, in order to “deter Russia and China simultaneously,” adding that the U.S. needs to “develop a nuclear arsenal with the size, sophistication, and tailoring — including new capabilities at the theater level — to ensure that there is no circumstance in which America is exposed to serious nuclear coercion.”

Consider all of that a frightening vision of our now all-too-imminent future: a president freed from the restraints of the constitution, unchecked by Congress or the courts — or by his cabinet advisors. In the words of MSNBC’s Ali Velshi, Project 2025 has set the stage for Donald Trump to be the very opposite of what this country’s founders intended, “a king,” surrounded not by “groups of qualified experts” but by “unblinking yes-men.”

(Dis)Trust in the Presidency

The growing power of the presidency has been taking place in plain view, as unilateral powers have accumulated decade after decade in the Oval Office, while the recent choice of president has also become a grim choice about the nature and powers of the presidency itself. Notably, the rise in executive powers has coincided with a creeping distrust of government in this country. Since the early 1960s, when nearly 80% of Americans said they trusted government “most of the time,” the public’s faith in this country’s federal government hovers at just over 20%, according to the Pew Research Center. And no wonder. When the office of the president refuses to accept the checks and balances that underlie the democratic system, the country’s trust in negotiated, reasonable, and restrained outcomes understandably falls away.

Sadly, in this era, the benefits of restoring the very notion of checks and balances that birthed the nation have come to seem ever more like a quaint dream.

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26 comments

  1. MFB

    Surely, the only reason that the Presidency is getting more power is that the o ligarchs who run the country would rather have to bribe only one person instead of several hundred.

    Incidentally, what about Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman’s respective wars against freedom of expression in peacetime? I can’t help noticing that the author is a lot more critical of Republicans than of Democrats.

  2. JohnA

    “With Donald Trump’s reelection, the slide toward a dangerously empowered president has reached a moment of reckoning, particularly when it comes to foreign affairs and warfare.”

    Good grief, a president that may end wars, how dangerous and UnAmerican can Trump be?

      1. Louis Fyne

        well, good thing Biden and Pelosi spent the last 4 years abiding by the “One China Policy” to the letter and not selling weapons to Taiwan or training Taiwanese troops with Ameeican troops.

        oh wait.

      1. Yves Smith Post author

        As recounted REPEATEDLY and in gory detail by Douglas Macgregor, who had a seat at the table, Trump issued bureaucratically valid withdrawal orders in Jan 2020, which would have been a vastly better time to pull out (tribes all in their redoubts then, they would not have been able to attack withdrawing troops and Pentagon would haven been able to get most/all equipment and compromised friendlies out). The Pentagon flatly refused to comply.

          1. fjallstrom

            And it was clear that the US and its hand picked proxy government had lost the war. Under Biden US troops were pushed out, so they retreated out of the country and continued the economic warfare.

            I don’t think either Trump or Biden deserves much credit for realising that a lost war is lost.

    1. Yves Smith Post author

      Yes, in the weird way the brain works, I realized I had made that mistake about 2 minutes after I walked out the door, when I was not to return for > one hour. Fixed.

  3. Louis Fyne

    This is insane, Trump is only using the tools institutionalized by Clinton,(rehabilitated Dem. hero) W Bush, Obama and Biden…

    in that much like legacy media has cornered itself into irrelevance with TDS, the once vibrant progressive blogosphere (2002 to 2015, RIP) has too. Now it’s another 4 years of 1934 German Orange Man bad.

    I watched a viral clip of The Young Turk’s Cenk (forgot his last name)… he has shaken himself out of his TDS stupor…largely from the shellacking on Tuesday. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3j7m0tbZJgE

    Cenk is a rarity. The world is moving on…and seeing all these video political blogs sprouting on Tiktok and Twitter, it is reasonable to say that we are seeing a generational shift to Trumpism.

    Trump is the symptom of DC rot, not the cause.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3j7m0tbZJgE

    1. ISL

      Tom Dispatch lives in the “world” where TDS is the standard and he (and his writers) knows his audience – consent must be manufactured.

      Sadly, this prevents realistic analysis and underlies declarations of the nobility of anyone who is not Trump, as if Obama and Biden, while virtue signaling their climate change fight commitment (to pick one, there are many many others. e.g., single-payer health care), implemented policies that did the opposite, whereas Trump did not virtue signal and maintained continuity in pro-fossil fuel policies.

    2. Jabura Basadai

      great clip from Cenk Uygur – just wished he had said anything about the genocide in Gaza – but otherwise a very good and strident rebuke of the Dems

  4. Cervantes

    The article’s focus on foreign policy and national security obscures other ways that the executive has become less tied to Congress. It basically ignores domestic, especially liberal-favored, policies. If you draw in domestic policies, to some extent, FDR’s entire presidency was focused on removing decision-making authority from Congress to place it in administrative state staffed by technocrats who would ideally be better experts and less subject to cronyism and the light corruption of campaign donations, future gigs, and so on practiced in legislatures. This was sort of a central aspect of progressive reform in the early 20th century. (You can decide for yourself whether career civil servants are better or worse than Congressional representatives and their staffers.)

    Or consider Obama. If you bring in domestic policies, Obama wasn’t just a “didn’t do enough to fix it” regarding the imperial presidency. He was the most imperial president since Nixon. Faced with a hostile Congress, he actively advanced policies through executive order that he had previously unambiguously stated needed congressional support. For example, he just decided to stop enforcing immigration laws and created de facto legal presence for wide swaths of people (first in DACA, but then more widely in expanded DACA in late 2014). His first pass at CO2 regulation, love it or hate it, was a very broad and tenuous reading of the Clean Air Act. He pushed guidance on a number of fronts that bent the law and drove conservatives nuts. Of course, I imagine liberal-leaning commentators don’t want to bring up how issues they politically like were advanced in imperial ways by the Obama presidency. But they were! And the pendulum always swings back. I watched the musical chairs when all the people who argued Obama’s expanded DACA orders were within presidential authority or not switched places for the arguments over Trump’s so-called Muslim ban. Some of these were literally the same people arguing the opposite thing about sweeping presidential authority over immigration.

    Take another area back within the ambit of foreign policy. Technically, Congress has to ratify treaties. But doing so can be hard, because you first need congressional support to do it, and if something needs changed, you also need congressional support to fix it. So, we invented “executive agreements.” The legal status of these can vary, but they basically allow the president to enter agreements with foreign governments that are mostly binding on the U.S. Except that, the next president technically has the legal ability to drop the executive agreement, which means the agreements are disciplined less by legal bindingness and more by political constraints. Again, faced with a hostile Congress, President Obama relied entirely on executive agreements for things like the Paris Climate Agreement and the JCPOA, the deal with Iran. These were bad choices, especially the JCPOA. Obama’s personnel negotiated on behalf of the U.S. as if they could keep promises to Iran, but they didn’t have legal authority to bind the next president two years later. To use Yves’s term, if a president is negotiating an executive agreement with a Congress in opposition, the U.S. is not “agreement capable.” But Obama did it anyway, thinking he could just impose his administration’s will over the heads of Congress. And the practices around executive agreements are a key example of the presidency being an increasingly central and important office.

    Now, I don’t want to say that Obama is an especially bad guy for all this, since in many ways he was driven by an irrational and ridiculous level of do-nothingism from the Republicans in Congress. And maybe that is the missing piece in the analysis, partisanship. Essentially, the federal government is designed with the assumption that the egos and political interests of people in each branch would ensure constitutional limits on power were respected. Congress would want to keep the president in check, in other words. But once partisanship becomes the norm, then a friendly Congress may overlook the transgressions of an imperial presidency, and a foolishly oppositional Congress may leave the presidency with strong temptations to take unilateral action.

  5. The Rev Kev

    ‘Over the president’s veto, Congress enacted the War Powers Act (1973), which required future presidents to obtain authorization from Congress to engage U.S. forces in foreign combat for more than 90 days.’

    And yet when Obama ignored that 90 day limit when he was President, the Congress did absolutely nothing. Didn’t even issue him with a sternly worded letter. From what I have been reading, members of Congress are kept too busy with fundraising to worry about their powers being taken away from them.

    1. CA

      https://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/26/world/middleeast/26powers.html

      May 26, 2011

      Libya Effort Is Called Violation of War Act
      By Charlie Savage

      WASHINGTON — Several lawmakers from both parties on Wednesday accused President Obama of violating the War Powers Resolution by continuing American participation in NATO’s air war in Libya without Congressional authorization, but they struggled with the question of what Congress can or should do about it.

      At a hearing of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, several members attacked Mr. Obama for failing to withdraw United States military forces from conflict after the expiration of a 60-day deadline for hostilities that have not been approved by Congress. The Libyan operation reached that deadline, which was imposed by the war powers law of the Vietnam era, on Friday.

      “The president is not a king, and he shouldn’t act like a king,” said Representative Dan Burton, Republican of Indiana. Representative Brad Sherman, Democrat of California, said the administration was treating lawmakers as “irrelevant” by failing to acknowledge that the deadline had passed or to explain itself.

      “It’s time for Congress to step forward,” said Mr. Sherman. “It’s time to stop shredding the U.S. Constitution in a presumed effort to bring democracy and constitutional rule of law to Libya.” …

  6. Joe Well

    >>He already indicated that he might withdraw the U.S. from NATO and end support for Ukraine.

    This is supposed to be a bad thing??? This isn’t what the people want and voted for? The anti-democratic Democratic Party.

  7. pjay

    As Yves notes in her introduction there were a number of important contributors to our current situation that were left out or understated. For one thing, I don’t see Dick Cheney’s name anywhere here. There have been few, if any, individuals since Nixon who have been more central to this steady policy trajectory, starting with his stint in the Ford administration. I realize the author is mainly using Presidents as historical markers. But our current “Presidential unilateralism” has been the work of a number of neocon/natsec “vulcans” working behind the scenes both in and out of various administrations over the decades. On that subject, though it is mentioned in passing, both the content and the history of the Patriot Act deserve considerably more discussion here, even in a brief over view essay. I also think the repeal of the Smith-Mundt Act as part of the 2013 NDAA has been vastly overlooked for its effects in transforming the State Department from an agency for diplomacy (at least nominally) to, literally, a Ministry of Propaganda. That was on Obama’s watch as well.

    And as others have noted, the essay all seems to lead up to warning of the Dangers of Trump and his Project 2025 “associates.” Careful, he might pull us out of NATO! I guarantee you that if Trump made serious moves against our foreign policy machine our sheep-like milksop Congress that is supposedly so powerless would rise up in fury, as would our national security establishment that is supposed to be under control of our increasingly dictatorial President.

  8. flora

    an aside: there are still plenty of uni-party GOP Senators. Think of people like Lindsey Graham and Mitt Romney for example. I imagine a GOP intraparty fight is coming. I’m catching the first glimpses of it in this mornings local newspapers. / ;)

  9. Not Moses

    A deeply ignorant, sociopath with “Sun King” tendencies, living in a physical world where all is gold plated and mirror shiny, Trump is unique among his predecessors. Whereas, prior presidents may have acted unilaterally, right or wrong based on ideology, Trump is devoid of any, except self interest. Were China to offer him a billion dollars not to pass any tariffs, everyone knows, he would oblige. His campaign manager, now his WH Chief of Staff, Suzie Wiles, seems to have managed to convince him to adhering to a modicum of discipline. That’s gone now.

    Project 2025 will make its ugly weight felt – but, it’s the work of others, not Trump. If women are bleeding to death because medical doctors can’t practice their profession, worse things will happen; Trump remains indifferent. If deportations of illegal immigrants is handled carefully, most of the country will support. But, as is usual, chaos and vitriol drives it, then it will be messy. Interestingly, Steven Miller as anti immigration czar, will probably pull a Netanyahu – human animals and all.

    Not sure he’ll withdraw from NATO, but he’ll probably assert greater demands on its members.

  10. Mark Gisleson

    I’m not angry that Trump got elected, but since Tuesday I cannot believe how much more I’ve learned about Obama, Biden and the neolib/cons, none of it good.

    Idiocracy always rankled me because it seemed to place the blame in all the wrong places. Maybe someone can make a comedy about wokeocracy and the noirish exploits of Dark Brandon and all the CIA’s embeds.

  11. Monsoon

    It is what will happen between now and January 20th, 2025 that should concern people.

    The neo-cons will leave Trump with a mess of drastic proportions while capitalism savages America.

    Trump is a figurehead for BlackRock, Blackstone and so many other asset managers that look forward to a unregulated economy.

    But that is what we have now.

    For the issue is capitalism.

  12. Kouros

    Olygarchies hate any vestigies of democracy and prefer to work with and employ tyrants that do their bidding. They only hate tyrants that concern themselves with giving some bones with meat to hoi polloi while clipping some “freedoms”.

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