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06Jan21


A Mob and the Breach of Democracy: The Violent End of the Trump Era


So this is how it ends. The presidency of Donald John Trump, rooted from the beginning in anger, division and conspiracy-mongering, comes to a close with a violent mob storming the Capitol at the instigation of a defeated leader trying to hang onto power as if America were just another authoritarian nation.

The scenes in Washington would have once been unimaginable: A rampage through the citadel of American democracy. Police officers brandishing guns in an armed standoff to defend the House chamber. Tear gas deployed in the Rotunda. Lawmakers in hiding. Extremists standing in the vice president's spot on the Senate dais and sitting at the desk of the speaker of the House.

The words used to describe it were equally alarming: Coup. Insurrection. Sedition. Suddenly the United States was being compared to a "banana republic" and receiving messages of concern from other capitals. "American carnage," it turned out, was not what President Trump would stop, as he promised upon taking office, but what he wound up delivering four years later to the very building where he took the oath.

The convulsion in Washington capped 1,448 days of Twitter storms, provocations, race-baiting, busted norms, shock-jock governance and truth-bending prevarication from the Oval Office that have left the country more polarized than in generations. Those who warned of worst-case scenarios only to be dismissed as alarmists found some of their darkest fears realized. By day's end, some Republicans discussed removing Mr. Trump under the 25th Amendment rather than wait two weeks for the inauguration of President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.

The extraordinary invasion of the Capitol was a last-ditch act of desperation from a camp facing political eviction. Even before the mob set foot in the building on Wednesday afternoon, Mr. Trump's presidency was slipping away. Democrats were taking control of the Senate with a pair of Georgia runoff election victories that Republicans angrily blamed on the president's erratic behavior.

Two of his most loyal allies, Vice President Mike Pence and Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, broke with Mr. Trump as never before, refusing to go along with his bid to overturn a democratic election after standing behind him or remaining quiet through four years of toxic conflict, scandal and capriciousness.

And following the attack on the Capitol, even more Republicans abandoned him. While most Republicans in the House stuck with him, he lost more than half of the Republican senators who started the day on his side of the battle, leaving him just six on the first Senate vote when deliberations resumed after the rioters were removed.

"What we have seen today is unlawful and unacceptable," said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Republican of Washington State, who reversed plans to join Mr. Trump's effort. "I have decided I will vote to uphold the Electoral College results and I encourage Donald Trump to condemn and put an end to this madness."

Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the third-ranking Republican in the House, said Mr. Trump was responsible for the violence. "There's no question that the president formed the mob, the president incited the mob, the president addressed the mob," she told Fox News in comments she then posted online. "He lit the flames. This is what America is not."

Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri, another senior Republican, said he had no more interest in what Mr. Trump had to say after the events that forced lawmakers to flee their own chambers. "I don't want to hear anything," he told reporters. "It was a tragic day and I think he was part of it."

The cascade of criticism came even from within Mr. Trump's circle, as advisers expressed deepening concern about how far he has been willing to go to undo an election he lost. At least three aides, Stephanie Grisham, Sarah Matthews and Rickie Niceta, resigned with more expected to follow. After he initially offered only mild statements calling on the mob in the Capitol to be peaceful, several members of Mr. Trump's team publicly implored him to do more.

"The best thing @realDonaldTrump could do right now is to address the nation from the Oval Office and condemn the riots," Mick Mulvaney, who served as his White House chief of staff and still serves as a special envoy, wrote on Twitter. "A peaceful transition of power is essential to the country and needs to take place on 1/20."

Others debunked their own former boss's brazenly false fraud allegations. "Dear MAGA- I am one of you," wrote Alyssa Farah, who just stepped down as Mr. Trump's communications director last month, noting that she has worked not just for Mr. Trump but also the conservative Freedom Caucus in the House. "I campaigned w/ Trump & voted for him. But I need you to hear me: the Election was NOT stolen. We lost."

Moments after Mr. Biden went on live television to deplore the "insurrection" at the Capitol and call on Mr. Trump to go before cameras, the president posted a recorded video online that offered mixed messages. Even as he told supporters it was time to withdraw, he praised them rather than condemning their actions and repeated his grievances against people who were "so bad and so evil."

"I know you're hurt," he told the rioters. "We had an election that was stolen from us. It was a landslide election and everyone knows it, especially the other side. But you have to go home now." He added: "We love you. You're very special." Rather than calming the waters, the video was seen as further roiling them -- so much so that Facebook and Twitter took it down and temporarily suspended Mr. Trump's accounts.

Tom Bossert, the president's former homeland security adviser, called out his former boss. "This is beyond wrong and illegal," he said on Twitter. "It's un-American. The President undermined American democracy baselessly for months. As a result, he's culpable for this siege, and an utter disgrace."

While Washington has seen many protests over the years, including some that turned violent, the uprising on Wednesday was unlike anything that the city has seen during a transition of power in modern times, literally interrupting the constitutional acceptance of Mr. Biden's election victory.

The assault on the Capitol was the first by a large hostile group of invaders since the British sacked the building in 1814, according to the United States Capitol Historical Society. Four Puerto Rican nationalists entered peacefully in 1954 and sat in the House visitors gallery, at which point they pulled out guns and opened fire, injuring five lawmakers. In 1998, a gunman walked into the Capitol and killed two members of the Capitol Police.

But none of them was egged on by an American president the way that Mr. Trump seemed to do on Wednesday during a "Save America March" on the Ellipse south of the White House just as Congress was convening to validate Mr. Biden's election.

"We will never give up," Mr. Trump had declared. "We will never concede. It doesn't happen. You don't concede when there's theft involved. Our country has had enough. We will not take it anymore, and that's what this is all about."

As the crowd on the Ellipse chanted, "Fight for Trump! Fight for Trump!" the president lashed out at members of his own party for not doing more to help him cling to power. "There are so many weak Republicans," he growled and then vowed to take revenge against those he deemed insufficiently loyal. "You primary them," he said.

He singled out Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia, a Republican who angered him by not intervening in the election, calling him "one of the dumbest governors in the United States." And he went after William P. Barr, the attorney general who debunked his false election complaints. "All of a sudden, Bill Barr changed," he groused.

Other speakers, including his sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, castigated Republican lawmakers for not standing up for Mr. Trump. "Let's have trial by combat," exhorted Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former New York mayor who has served as the president's personal lawyer.

"The people who did nothing to stop the steal -- this gathering should send a message to them," Donald Trump Jr. said. "This isn't their Republican Party anymore. This is Donald Trump's Republican Party."

But the question is for how long. Mr. Trump faced the end of his reign much as he began it, with a fervent, hard-core base but without the support of most Americans. He won in 2016 through the Electoral College with nearly three million fewer votes in the popular tally than his opponent and lost by seven million in November. He did not earn the approval of a majority of Americans in major surveys for a single day of his tenure, unlike any of his predecessors in the history of polling.

Had it not been for the attack on the Capitol, the break by Mr. Pence and Mr. McConnell would have been a political earthquake by itself. Mr. Pence rebuffed the president's demand that he use his role as presiding officer over the Electoral College count to reject electors for Mr. Biden. And Mr. McConnell gave a forceful speech repudiating Mr. Trump's effort to nullify the election.

"If this election were overturned by mere allegations from the losing side, our democracy would enter a death spiral," Mr. McConnell said before the Capitol was overrun.

Mr. Pence released a letter saying he did not have the power to do what the president wanted him to do. "Vesting the vice president with unilateral authority to decide presidential contests would be entirely antithetical" to the constitutional design, he wrote.

He added: "It is my considered judgment that my oath to support and defend the Constitution constrains me from claiming unilateral authority to determine which electoral votes should be counted and which should not."

With Mr. Pence unwilling and unable to stop the count, the president's supporters made it their mission to do it themselves. And for several hours, they succeeded. But after they were finally cleared out of a ransacked Capitol, lawmakers resumed the process of ending the Trump presidency.

Even Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, one of his strongest allies, essentially declared the Trump era done as he opposed the attempt to override the election results. "Enough's enough," he said on the floor. "It is over."

[Source: By Peter Baker, The New York Times, 06Jan21]

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small logoThis document has been published on 12Jan21 by the Equipo Nizkor and Derechos Human Rights. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.