Opinion A crisis in U.S. presidential legitimacy is looming
By Charles Lane
Editorial writer and columnist
If anyone — Democrat or Republican — hoped the four indictments against former president Donald Trump would weaken him politically, they have so far hoped in vain. Rather than making him more beatable in the Republican primaries, or inducing him to quit, Trump’s “legal issues,” as they are known in media shorthand, have had a negligible — or slightly positive — impact on his political fortunes.
Fourteen months from November 2024, political reality is: Trump is headed to the GOP nomination and has a fair chance of defeating President Biden or any other Democrat.
Obviously, a lot can happen in the next 14 months; Trump could still lose to one of his current GOP rivals or a late entrant. A health crisis — God forbid — could force Biden from the race. A criminal conviction could finally break Trump’s hold on the GOP electorate: Forty-five percent of Republicans won’t vote for him if he’s found guilty; 52 percent if he goes to prison, according to a recent Reuters-Ipsos poll.
If present trends continue, however, the country will see a repeat of the 2020 contest. And that means the United States, upon whose political stability such matters as the security of Europe and Asia and the world’s reserve currency ultimately depend, could be facing a crisis of presidential legitimacy — regardless of who wins or how cleanly.
A basis is being laid for people on either side to question or reject an outcome they don’t like. For Trump and, apparently, tens of millions of his followers, there is no such thing as a free and fair election that he loses. Indicting him, however necessary and appropriate, provides a narrative about “election interference” and “jailing political opponents” that Trump is already exploiting. The indictments have not deterred him from lying about the result in 2020 and will not deter him from creating new lies about 2024.
To be sure, Trump could win fair and square. Charged with covering up hush money to an adult-film actress, mishandling classified documents and conspiring to thwart the will of the people in the 2020 presidential election, impeached twice for actions during his presidency and found civilly liable for a pre-2017 sexual assault, Trump today is regarded favorably by 39.8 percent of the public, according to the FiveThirtyEight polling average. That’s up 0.8 percentage points from Feb. 1, 2021. Biden’s personal favorability is at 41.2 percent.
Forty-six percent of registered voters would choose Trump for president, putting him in a tie with Biden, per the most recent Wall Street Journal poll. Trump won an electoral college victory in 2016 with 46.2 percent of the popular vote and narrowly lost one with 46.9 percent in 2020. The pro-Republican areas of the U.S. political map contain 235 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win.
For all those who do not vote for Trump next year, the narrative of illegitimacy regarding a victory for him could be more reality-based but — in objective political terms — also potentially disruptive.
Trump’s probable path to actual victory is via a slender electoral vote majority, with less than a majority of the popular vote, quite possibly aided by a third-party drain on Biden’s votes. Trump might indeed arrive at his swearing-in on Jan. 20, 2025, having been convicted, still facing trial in other cases — or both. And he would owe his political survival to religious fundamentalists and right-wing nationalists, who would staff key positions in his government.
The world has recently gotten a taste of what can happen when a right-wing leader stages a comeback, based on a narrow mandate and beholden to extreme elements of his coalition, while still on trial for alleged corruption: Benjamin Netanyahu’s return as Israel’s prime minister last year. The secular and liberal half of Israeli society staged mass protests of what it saw as threateningly radical policy changes by a government that did not deserve to rule. Something similar could await Trump.
De-escalation is nowhere in sight. The Republican-led House is exploring impeachment of Biden, on hyperbolic corruption charges. The final phase could be a futile but — for the president — distracting and embarrassing election-year trial in the Democratic-led Senate.
Democrats are starting to embrace a novel legal theory that Trump, because of his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack, should be kicked off the ballot under the 14th Amendment’s bar on office-holding by insurrectionists. Trump’s disqualification would enrage his supporters, with unpredictable consequences; if it does not happen, and Trump wins, then the 14th Amendment would add yet another argument for opponents to resist his presidency.
To repeat: This is an assessment of political reality, not moral equivalency. The entire U.S. body politic would be much healthier and resilient if Trump had simply accepted defeat in 2020 rather than shred long-standing democratic norms, possibly beyond repair.
There is still time for U.S. democracy to avoid a worst-case scenario, even if it’s not exactly clear how. Surely the first step, though, is to recognize what might lie ahead.
The next election will be very interesting. They're pushing through a law about AI requiring use in ads must be stated for image/audio. Many think AI will hurt the elections.
Contrary to the objections of GOP pundits, the 14th Amendment IS plainly applicable in THIS day and THIS time. The 14th amendment comes from the disgust at the racism and white supremacy that continued after the Civil War ended. Few would argue that Trump and MAGA seek to re-litigate the Civil War's ending, insofar as non-whites get to vote just like white folk. Trump inherited a KKK legacy from his father, and embraced it. No, the 14th Amendment is absolutely appropriate. It DOES apply, not just to Trump, but those who participated in Jan 6, including Wray, the Flynn brothers, the Congresspersons, and many others who help that happen.
The real crisis of legitimacy derives from a political party whose presence exists entirely as a function of corruption: endless voter suppression, gerrymandering, intimidation, lynching, and all the other obscene tricks. AND, now, financial support from Russia, disinformation from Russia, and polarization from Russia. The GOP is now propped up by Russia, from Santos to DeSantis, from the NRA to Fox & 4chan.The GOP no longer seeks to govern, but seeks to dismantle the government for Russia's benefit. The GOP is a party of traitors, whether they admit it or not. That treason speaks clearly to the issue of sedition and the 14th Amendment. It also speaks to the pathetically ineffectual military establishment, which has stood back and watched as fascism has latched onto the GOP. The failure of the intelligence agencies to apprise the population of Russia's incursions cannot be excused.
Biden has has weaponized the dept of Justice against his political opponents. If Biden wins again we may have civil war.
Are you saying that if a former Democratic president was suspected of trying to overthrow an election that he lost, that a sitting Republican administration should not allow the DoJ to prosecute?