When Trump emerged, we awaited eagerly
the demise of the uncouth fool. We're still waiting. For every
month that goes by, the question of “who's the fool” is batting
itself around like a beach ball in the stands of a ball game.
It's one thing for the largely ignorant
but massively resentful “base” to keep the ignorant, uncouth fool
alive, but who would have believed the constant resuscitation by a
thoroughly transformed and disfigured Republican party? Former
believers in Republican cant have felt the scales fall from their
eyes as Republican politicians desert their professed principles and
kowtow to Trump. Despite my viewing Republicans in congress better
described as paid agents of large corporations rather than as true
representatives of the people, I have to admit, it's a shock.
Stuart Steven's book title captures it
succinctly: It
Was All A Lie. But the surprise is not only Republican. In his
terrific new book, Midnight
in Washington, Adam Schiff recounts his shock, as Republicans he
liked and even admired so readily shed their professed beliefs like
the snakes they apparently are. Rather than believing Lord Acton's
saying that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely,
Schiff prefers Robert Caro's formulation that power doesn't corrupt
so much as it reveals. He could also have quoted Lincoln, who said,
“Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a
man’s character, give him power.”
As he told
Kara Swisher last Thursday:
“Most of my
Republican colleagues do not believe the big lie. They know it’s a
big lie. And yet they push it because they’re afraid of Trump,
because they’re afraid of a primary, because they want to advance
to the Senate or maybe they want a cabinet appointment in another
Trump administration. And it turns out nothing is quite as important
as that. Not their oath, not their ideology, not what the party used
to stand for. And that was a terrible realization for me.”
In any case, his blinders removed, Adam
Schiff has found himself in the ring contending with the largest
revolt against our constitution in 170 years, and he is well aware of
it. As one of the most thoughtful and articulate of the resisters,
he is well worth paying heed to as he recounts his trials and
tribulations and thoughts and fears.
My thought is, what a hero Schiff has
been, especially leading the first Trump impeachment, especially
standing so strong against the Republican lies and all their
mishigas! So when I was invited to a breakfast fundraiser last
Friday for Adam (I'm going to call him Adam, because he did call me
“Budd” at the fundraiser, so why not?) at my friend Doug
Goldman's house, I was thrilled to go. I wanted to see if he had
anything new to say to the small breakfast group, or at least to see
him in the flesh and get him to inscribe my copy of his book, which I
was lucky enough to get on the first day before they ran out at East
Bay Booksellers. Going to see a hero in a small group is not a small
thing!
So, as I got ready to go to the
breakfast, I had to think through the subject at hand. Of course,
it's no news that a slow coup attempt is under way, even the late
adopters see it now. The major popular theoretical texts are
Levitsky and Ziblatt's How
Democracies Die, and Timothy Snyder's On
Tyranny, I guess. Then, filling out the theory with events, the
autocratic-leaning steps that Trumpists and Republicans are taking
are being documented by a spate of books by participants, including
Strzok's book I reviewed,
Leonnig and Rucker's book,
Woodward and Costa's Peril,
and now Adam's book as well. (Mary Trump's book, tracing what it
takes to be world class sociopath, which I reviewed,
is also first class in many ways.)
It's one thing to understand and
describe what's going on, but it's another thing to act. What is the
country, led by the Democrats, going to do about it? At this point,
it isn't clear, at least to me. Of course they will try to win the
midterm elections next year and, contrary to historical pattern,
increase their slim margins in House and Senate. Adam says that they
actually will have a chance at that, because the Democratic majority
is not a bloated one, since Biden had no coattails. But, the
question is, how exactly are they going to do that? By passing
excellent and transformational legislation, thus earning the votes of
right-thinking and grateful Americans? By having excellent
candidates to run on kitchen table issues, similar to the
“preexisting conditions” campaigns of the recent past? Or will
they break that pattern and nationalize the elections, trying not to
run on what a good guy Biden is and how well he has done and what
more he can do with a good majority, but instead run against Trump
and Trumpism? Or maybe do both?
And underlying that question of
strategy, what are they going to do with the blatant and defiant
attempts of Republicans to corrupt the process of elections, the
state gerrymandering and voter suppression legislation, the
substitution of legislators for impartial officials to supervise the
elections, and the attempted installation of fifth columnists ready
and eager to declare slate of electors invalid and to install their
own? Add to that the physical intimidation of honest officials
trying to do their jobs, and traditional election strategizing seems
passé.
So, these are questions I've had in my
mind, and I wondered if I could get any insight into them at this
hour long breakfast. I kind of doubted it – I expected the “here's
what we are going to say to our supporters” talk from Adam. But
anyway, because I'm not particularly fast on my feet orally and I'm
not a great questioner who can follow up well, I figured I might give
it a try by writing down a question or two. As Tom Lehrer advised,
Be Prepared!
I started by writing down a bunch of
questions, and then I culled it down to one long question that I
would hope to ask. Here are the questions I started with, and then
the one I decided on.
The
Danger of Subversion Within The Ranks Of Law Enforcement
Make all the
laws you want, if they are not obeyed, they then need to be enforced.
Can we be sure of enforcement? Police departments are full of right
wingers, prejudice, and rebellion under the leadership of openly
defiant police unions. Even if formal leaders are in line, will the
troops follow their orders, or follow Trumps on their own volition?
ICE and CBP have shown authoritarian, prejudicial tendencies. Where
did the un-badged enforcement troops come from in Portland and
Lafayette Square? The military does seem to be OK. Not sure about
the courts with all the Trump appointees, many openly advocating
rebellion against Roe vs. Wade, for instance.
What will
happen if insurgents in states and localities take control
fraudulently? Courts order, maybe – there are bad judges – and
then what? Who's really minding the people with actual physical
force? Consent of the governed is fine, but behind that consent is
the state monopoly on violence. What will happen if that monopoly
breaks down?
In short, it
would appear we have every reason to be worried about enforcement.
Is anything being done?
DOJ
Avidity To Prosecute
Many people
(including me) wonder where Merrick Garland is on the question of
conspiracy to subvert the 2020 election after the vote, and on
high-level leadership that led to January 6. Publicly available
evidence seems clearly to indicate that Trump and others worked
together to subvert democracy. Shouldn't the DOJ be working very
hard to investigate this case? Are they waiting for the House
committee? Is there reason to wait? Could a lot be happening there
that we don't know about? Are you concerned that they will place a
higher priority on making DOJ look “impartial” than on saving
democracy from subversion by Trump and Republicans?
Why are
recommended sentences for capitol assaulters so light? Because all
they have is “trespassing?” Is it true that DOJ has 3 levels:
those who were there, those who attacked police, and those who
planned? Are those who flipped indicating higher ups, of whom some
could be prominent? What about inciters speaking to group before
they moved down Pennsylvania Avenue?
I posted this
on Twitter and got interest:
“What is
behind these "take it easy on them" recommended sentences
for assaulting the capitol? I guess the law doesn't cover intended
insurrection well? Just get them on "trespassing?" A puzzle
to me.”
Do you think
DOJ is actually prioritizing the capitol assault and the plot against
America, and we just don't see it yet? I'm going to fundraiser with
Adam Schiff on Friday, hoping to get chance to ask him. Looking for
nod and wink.What is your level of confidence that the DOJ will be
acting decisively? Is it above level 5 out of 10?
The
Problem Of Widespread Treason
It's pretty
clear that many high officials are guilty of treason. Indeed, you
could say the whole Republican party falls into that description.
Ziblatt and Levitsky currently comment:
“We
did not expect that the entire Republican Party would evolve into an
anti-democratic force, and that’s where they are today,” he
said. “The entire Republican leadership, with a small handful of
exceptions, is now no longer willing to accept electoral defeat.”
What is the
preferred course of action? What do you do when it stopped short of
armed insurrection, in the main, but there is widespread unarmed
insurrection? Cheating and stealing elections is insurrection, isn't
it? Truthfully, every senator and representative who voted against
certification were treasonous. Some did much more than that. You
could say that a public official's failing now to support the
validity of the presidential election certainly violates their oaths
to support the constitution. At the very least they should be barred
from holding public office for ten years.
These are the
kinds of things one contemplates after an armed insurrection has been
put down. But what we are facing is unarmed insurrection, with some
exceptions. What is to be done?
Public
Understanding Of The Stakes, Of What Fascism Is
Adam Schiff's
TV appearances have emphasized his confidence that the good sense of
the American people will assert itself eventually in rejecting
Trumpism. Of course, we have thought this for six years now. What
is Rep. Schiff's strategy of reassurance here? Is he secure in what
is being done? We need the “time will come” to come pretty damn
fast.
Do you think
the people of America don't understand our current constitutional
danger, or officials? Or the Democratic party? So many are saying,
don't you realize how dangerous this is? And yet those same talkers,
what are they doing? Lawyers lawyer, talkers talk.
When faced
with possible insurrection by a highly motivated minority, the
alertness and alarm of the majority, and the majority leaders, is
crucial. How does one alert and inform the public? The media are
important, but unreliable, and are not sufficient. Greg Sargent in
the Washington Post says:
'The
White House, too, must lean into the threats to democracy to keep the
media from losing interest. Failing to educate the public about the
concerted effort to overthrow our democracy and ignoring the
connection between election subversion laws and the threat of future
coup attempts would be a gross dereliction of duty. Let’s hope the
media understand that “fairness”and “objectivity” do not
mean helping make Republicans look less crazed and dangerous than
they truly are.'
The “good
sense” of Americans needs some help. The decline if civics
teaching has helped people to know nothing at all about our
government as well as foreign governments. The details of fascism
escape us. How will people find out, so that they can assert their
good judgement based on facts? They need to be told and shown –
who will do this work?
My
suggestion is this: We need TV specials,
perhaps Ken Burns style, or inspired by How
Democracies Die by Harvard's Levitsky and Ziblatt, or On
Tyranny by Yale's Tim Snyder. This is what fascism looks like,
the thugism and the repression, and here are the steps other
countries took in getting there.
(Personally, I
would also encourage a special bipartisan commission addressing
itself exclusively to the issue of democracy, and not considering the
substantive political issues (immigration, wealth distribution,
etc.), whose mission would be exclusively to educate the public to
this vital issue.)
The
Possible Progression of Events – What Could Happen
What do you
think will happen if there is actually a steal, or if Trump actually
wins and starts to institute fascism? Who won't recognize Trump Part
II? Will taxpayers refuse the IRS? There will be organized
resistance – what then? The “unthinkable” should be made
thinkable now. It could happen.
The
Responsibility of Democrats
Finally, to
the Dems this issue of Trumpism is the kind of thing companies
commonly face: Trumpism isn't your fault, but it is your problem.
And maybe it is somewhat your fault – haven't stood up sufficiently
against wars, deindustrialization, and other social maladies that
have helped to fuel resentments. But the underlying problem of
undoing racism and the change of power from an ethnic group that is
resentful (“I might be poor, but at least I'm white”), that's
what makes Trumpism so powerful and dangerous, and that's the
Democrats' burden, but not their fault.
Then – what was a practical question
I could ask Adam if I got the chance? Here's what I came up with:
I'm halfway
through the book and I'm really enjoying it. I especially like the
humor and warmth – sitting with Dick Gephardt and realizing that
Adam and Eve are sitting with Dick and Jane, and your irrepressible
son, and the love of your family and friends. I can see you don't
take this gift for granted.
You are
unbelievably eloquent when you need to come up with spontaneous
reflection. In the House when challenged by Republicans who think
you should quit, you perorate with a listing of the transgressions
and say, “I don't think that's OK.” And the brilliant summary of
the First Impeachment when you say, yes, he's guilty, but is it
sufficient reason to remove him? So moving and brilliant.
My question
is this, however – when does a strength become a weakness. Lawyers
lawyer, and brilliant talkers talk brilliantly, but sometimes using
words is not enough, sometimes using words is bringing a knife to a
gun fight. There are people out there who are thugs, and thuggery is
the essence of fascism, and that's our threat. And we know from
Ziblatt and Levitsky that the highest conditions of threat to
democracy is when the dominance of an ethnic group is threatened. So
even though I don't think that we have essentially revolutionary
conditions in the country, it might be closer than we think.
So my
question is, while you are confident that the American people will
wake up and assert their essential goodness and belief in democracy,
how sure are you? Are you sure that the people really understand the
gift of democracy? Are you sure that when you and Marc Elias win in
court, that the police, riven with right wingers, will enforce the
courts' orders? That there won't be a mobilization of the same
troops who appeared unbadged in Portland and Lafayette Square won't
reappear all over? Are you sure that right will conquer might?
Since I was coming from the East Bay
going to Pacific Heights in San Francisco and didn't know what
traffic would be like, I got there early. The breakfast was being
held on the generous-sized patio just below Doug's front door with
about 10 small high tables, and since Adam was right on time, I got a
chance to talk to him, have him engrave my copy of his book, and to
give him my typed out question. What luck!
He took some time reading it closely,
and I apologized for it's being long, but he said, no, you have
really thought about it. And then his main answer was this: He
trusts that the American people will come to their senses, that they
won't throw democracy away. Interestingly, this is pretty much what
Leon Panetta said at the Goldman School of Public Policy conference
on my paper about Post
Trump Reforms – at the end of the day, he doesn't see Americans
trading in 230 years of democracy for this schmuck Trump.
I was animated in responding to his
confidence (that's a problem when I question or comment with high
ranking people, I get animated.) I protested that the American
people don't know enough about fascism, they don't know civics, or
history, and what we need is something like a Ken Burn's documentary
about fascism in Argentina, Turkey, etc. - not just the Nazi's –
and something on How Democracies Die and On Tyranny. Adam looked at
me and my animation, and didn't really reply. Maybe he was thinking
about what I said. I don't know. I mean, if you trust the American
people and then reflect on what they know, there might be a
disconnect. I do know what he thinks about this, though, because
here is what he said the day before our breakfast in an interview
with Kara Swisher:
Well, I think
part of what resonated for people is — in the last 30 to 40 years,
the middle class has become increasingly at risk of falling apart.
And people are most willing to rebel, to bring about a revolution,
not when they are most impoverished, but when they feel they are most
exposed to losing what they have. And he saw around the country
millions and millions of people who had had a Bush as president, and
their life didn’t change. And they had a Clinton as president and
their life hadn’t changed. And he said, I’m going to break
everything. And they were ready for somebody to break everything. And
they didn’t necessarily believe he was going to improve their
lives. But at least he was sticking it to those that they thought
were responsible for their circumstances. So I think that was part of
the appeal. And an enormous part of what my party needs to do. We
need to show that the democracy can work and can deliver for
everyone. We could create an economy that works for everyone. Which
is why the infrastructure bill and the Build Back Better bill are not
somehow separate and distinct from promotion of democracy.
He did that they knew who the unbadged
law enforcers were in Portland and Lafayette Square, but I didn't
follow up to get the specific answer. It's kind of amazing that that
whole subject has dropped from new coverage, don't you think?
Then he tri-folded my question and put
it in the inside pocket of his jacket. I was kind of surprised and
quite pleased; I guess I had expected he would just hand it back to
me.
Then he gave his graceful talk to this
very small and highly Jewish crowd, reflecting that Doug and he
shared a background in the schmata trade (“schmata” means “rag,”
as in, “I like your dress.” “This schmata?”) – Doug's
family was Levi-Strauss, Adam's was Farah (at the management level),
and one of the great embarrassments of his teenage life was having to
wear Farah jeans while all the other kids wore Levi-Strauss. Then he
made his pitch that we are under great strain, and that don't worry,
the Bipartisan infrastruture bill and the Reconciliation Build Back
Better bills would both get passed, and it's important to realize
that three really big bills are being passed in Biden's first year
and that's totally amazing, and who would have thought that Biden
would be so progressive. And as for the midterms and beyond, we just
have to get out there and organize and vote, and it's important to
realize that this problem will pass, that it's just a phase, and we
need to be optimistic because optimism is warranted.
I did get to ask one more question in
the open question period – Adam really wanted to get someone else
to question, I think, but at first mine was the only hand up – and
I asked him, when he had obviously spent so much effort, even under
the horrible Trump years, in trying to be accommodating and
respectful to the Republicans even as they lied and allowed
themselves to be seduced by corruption and moral malignancy, how is
he changing his behavior now that he must realize that they cannot be
regarded as opponents, but that they are enemies?
He didn't like it when I used the word
“enemy.” I was actually using it in a rather technical way –
see my post on The
Four Freedom's Plus Two that explains why they are so out of the
mainstream that they can't be compromised with – but you could see
that the word almost made him wince. His answer, though, was
interesting. He said that when led the prosecution of the first
impeachment before the Senate, he didn't know many of the senators,
but that he thought that when he finished there (he didn't gloat
about how brilliant his performance had been, really one for the
ages), he thought that there were a fair number of Republican
senators, maybe most, who didn't think of him anymore as an enemy.
But then he went on and in a low key way did say that the Republicans
can't be compromised with on the basic issues in question, but would
have to be beaten. Which he also said to Kara Swisher:
“And right
now as long as the Republican Party is a cult around the former
president. They just need to be beaten. The most corrosive thing
that Donald Trump did over four years was this relentless attack on
the truth.”
“And if you
can persuade someone, however falsely, that the other side looks down
on you, you will never win over their support. And so I think Donald
Trump gave a daily dose of poison into the body politic.”
“And Donald
Trump couldn’t do this on his own. He had a lot of enablers. The
enablers that I frankly hold most responsible are the men and women I
served with in Congress who surrendered everything they cared about,
everything they professed to believe in, to uphold this deeply
unethical man who was tearing at the fabric of our democracy. So
before members of Congress point fingers, we need to do our own
introspection. Had leaders in the G.O.P. stood up to Trump instead of
so readily capitulated, we would have avoided this.”
So he agrees with the basic point, he
just doesn't like the word “enemy.” I think that's a fair point,
it really is a toxic word, however accurate, and it has a sense to
permanence to it, perhaps, when we know that many of those who are
currently enemies are just weak (or bought), and can switch back to
being opponents, just as the recent New York Times profile of some of
the worst rioters on January 6 indicates that they were reflecting
crowd behavior, a weakness of character, rather than just the evil
that it seemed to be, and was.
I really wonder if there are plans I'm
not aware of to beat back this Trumpist coup – there must be, of
course there are. And if there are such plans, it would make sense
for the Democratic officials to tell their constituencies, be
confident, and concentrate on turnout.
So, I came away little the wiser on
Democratic policies, but I did get a sense of Adam the person, and
I'm quite sure he is a really good and very smart person. It was
great to meet him in person.
But the larger set of questions I had
prepared still stand. They are worth thinking and worrying about.
So this guy Adam Schiff is really
impressive. Who knows what his future will bring? Speaker, AG,
SCOTUS? Whatever, we're lucky to have him there in leadership now.
I do worry that he is too much the lawyer and not enough the man
directing action, but I have no doubt that, when the need arises, he
will meet it.
I'd like to be as optimistic as he says
that he is, and it really is hard to think how an entire nation can
be so deluded and disillusioned and devoid of true hopes for the
future as these awful Trumpists are. How can the worst come to rule?
But, the unthinkable has happened before, and what we think we know
always has to be approached with humility. How often do we not know
what we think we know? In the end we do our best and try our hardest
and hope. What else can one do?
But I have to say, I hope the plans of
our leaders extend must further than we are given to see. The nice
lady I was sitting with at the breakfast, Beth, said she was afraid
that the knife the Democrats are bringing to a knife fight is a
butter knife. I'd say that's a pretty widely held sentiment.
Budd Shenkin