Stress Test: How Donald Trump Threatens American Democracy
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About this ebook
?Trump neither understands nor respects the legal system. And his opponents sometimes fail to apply reasoned legal judgment to his unprecedented words and deeds.The sum total of this combination has been years of frenzied misjudgment - on both sides of the aisle. This collection of columns, previously published in newspapers around the world, looks at two things through the lens of the law: The presidency of Donald J. Trump and the response to the presidency of Donald J. Trump.
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Stress Test - William Cooper
PRAISE FOR WILLIAM COOPER AND STRESS TEST
"Stress Test is a compelling rallying cry for democratic institutions under threat in America."
—Publishers Weekly
A compelling and sensible overview of America’s emerging democratic crisis … the book’s reasoned tone and bipartisan critiques are a welcome perspective in an increasingly polarized and heated political landscape.
—Kirkus Reviews
An excellent short historical and predictive account of where America stands today and how recent history will inform its future.
—Manhattan Book Review
William Cooper’s collection of columns is essential reading for anyone who cares about the future of our democracy.
—Reader’s Favorite (Five-Star Review)
William Cooper is an insightful and thought-provoking writer about US politics. He deserves to be widely read.
—Thomas Plate, bestselling author of Conversations With Lee Kuan Yew, Oped Columnist, South China Morning Post
William Cooper is a leading global commentator on US politics.
—Channel News Asia
William Cooper’s … editorials are always thought-provoking and spark much-needed political discussion.
—Lindsey Chastain, Editor-in-Chief, Skiatook Journal
William Cooper is a welcome splash of reality on money, law and politics.
—Tennessee Tribune
United States journalist William Cooper provides keen insights about America’s constitutional democracy.
—Modern Ghana
William Cooper is a very insightful and pertinent author about world affairs.
—The City Paper Bogotá
First published in 2022
An Eyewear Publishing book, The Black Spring Press Group
Grantully Road, Maida Vale, London W9
United Kingdom
Typeset User Design, Illustration and Typesetting, UK Cover art Zeljka Kojic
The author has requested the publisher use American spelling and grammar wherever possible in this edition
All rights reserved
© William Cooper 2022
The right of William Cooper to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
ISBN-13 978-1-913606-68-8
eBook ISBN 978-1-839785-41-2
To my family.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
1/ Impeachment 1.0
2/ The Bulwark
3/ The People and the Press
4/ Criminal Justice Reform
5/ The Gathering Storm
6/ The Criminalization of Politics
7/ Election Season
8/ The Big Picture
9/ Who Will Count the Votes
Conclusion
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
William Cooper is an attorney and columnist. His writings have appeared in over one hundred publications globally including The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, New York Daily News, San Francisco Chronicle, Baltimore Sun, USA Today, Chicago Sun-Times, Jerusalem Post, and Huffington Post.
There are few things wholly evil or wholly good. Almost everything, especially of government policy, is an inseparable compound of the two, so that our best judgment of the preponderance between them is continually demanded.
—Abraham Lincoln
The truth unquestionably is, that the only path to a subversion of the republican system of the Country is, by flattering the prejudices of the people, and exciting their jealousies and apprehensions, to throw affairs into confusion, and bring on civil commotion.
—Alexander Hamilton
INTRODUCTION
THIS book is a collection of my previously published columns about American democracy. The columns explain how a frenzy of misbehavior and misjudgment threatens the American polity.
Donald Trump is the center of the storm. His words, deeds and basic instincts are fundamentally at odds with America’s long-held essential ideals. But Trump isn’t the only problem. Many of his friends, and plenty of his foes, also consistently violate important norms and traditions while seeking short-term political victories. This bipartisan race to the bottom is a stress test of the world’s preeminent constitutional democracy.
It continues today.
The columns in this book detail how Trump-era politics test four essential (and overlapping) principles of American democracy. The first is fidelity to the Constitution of the United States. Throughout American history government officials have broadly respected, honored, and followed the Constitution. Yet Donald Trump, the 45th President of the United States, neither understands nor respects the Constitution. He has called the document a foreign language,
disparaged the Emoluments Clause as the phony Emoluments Clause,
and claimed that I have an Article 2 where I have the right to do whatever I want as president.
Many in Trump’s Republican party have encouraged and supported Trump’s anti-constitutional behavior. And many Democrats, too, have cast aside long-held constitutional traditions in their frenetic effort to oppose Trump.
The second essential principle of American democracy tested during the Trump era is respect for the rule of law. The law must be applied evenly to all people. Always. Since Trump’s ascendancy in 2015, however, one’s political affiliation has often mattered more than the underlying facts relating to one’s guilt or innocence. Trump has been the worst offender of all, consistently calling for prosecutions of his political opponents—including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and Joe Biden. But both sides of the aisle have criminalized American politics. Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, for example, said about Trump in June of 2019: I don’t want to see him impeached. I want to see him in prison.
In a healthy democracy politicians focus their attention on the ballot box—not the jailhouse. And America’s descent towards the criminalized politics of failed states is a disturbing symptom of the nation’s broader affliction.
The third essential principle of American democracy tested during this time is the commitment to rational government. American democracy has lasted for centuries not simply because of the words in the Constitution. It has succeeded because of a national ethos firmly rooted in rationality, as embodied by America’s founders. While there have certainly been exceptions, reason and prudence have long shaped American public policy.
With Trump atop the Republican party, however, American politics have descended into a whirlpool of lies, false narratives and abhorrent stupidities. This irrationality has enveloped not just the populace but elected officials across the political aisle. The insanity of the fringe has risen to and infected the highest levels of American government.
The result has been a steady procession of public policy failures. The most shocking failure was the election of a constitutionally illiterate reality-television personality as president. But Trump’s presidency is only one example of a broader problem. America has nearly defaulted on its debts; millions of Americans have opposed simple health measures to fight the coronavirus; tens of thousands have died annually from drug overdoses; the federal deficit has exploded while basic infrastructure has gone into disrepair; state legislatures have fixated on distorting and limiting the franchise; economic inequality has increased exponentially; and the existential threat to the environment has gone largely unaddressed.
A rational polity would not let any, let alone all, of these sweeping policy failures occur.
Finally, perhaps the most important principle of American government challenged since Trump took office is the very notion that government officials are chosen by the people in free and fair elections. This premise of democracy has defined America from its outset. Yet Donald Trump and many of his Republican allies have attacked it, openly and unapologetically. Trump’s behavior leading up to, during, and after the 2020 presidential election—promulgating the Big Lie
that he, not Joe Biden, actually won the election—is the most destructive behavior of any president (or former president) in American history. Even after Trump’s supporters’ shocking riot at the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, the Big Lie
continues on as the central Republican platform heading into the 2022 congressional elections. Throughout the country Republicans in state office are reengineering their election systems so their future attempts to thwart voters’ intentions are more likely to succeed.
These violations of American democracy’s core principles are stunning. Yet, at the same time, many Americans have acted admirably in the Trump age. The Judiciary, for example, has largely remained a rational branch of government. Its wholesale rejection of Trump’s post election litigation claims was both expected and reassuring. Governmental officials on both sides of the aisle, moreover, continue to uniformly respect and follow court orders. Moderate senators with responsible objectives continue to exert important influence in both political parties. And, ultimately, there was a timely transfer of power after Joe Biden’s inauguration in January 2021: Trump went home when his term ended.
Battered and bruised, American democracy withstood the Trump presidency.
Like all stress tests, the American stress test reveals its subject’s strengths and its weaknesses. American democracy has proven to be both sturdy and vulnerable. The key to the future is the same overriding variable that has shaped the past: Donald Trump. The longer he dominates the Republican party the more likely America ultimately fails the stress test and descends