By Paul Krugman
The midterm elections were, to an important extent, a referendum on the Affordable Care Act; health care,
not Donald Trump, dominated Democratic campaigning. And voters
delivered a clear verdict: They want Obamacare’s achievements, the way
it expanded coverage to roughly 20 million people who would otherwise
have been uninsured, to be sustained.
But on Friday, Reed O’Connor, a partisan Republican judge known for “weaponizing” his judicial power, declared
the A.C.A. as a whole — protection for pre-existing conditions,
subsidies to help families afford coverage, and the Medicaid expansion —
unconstitutional. Legal experts from both right and left ridiculed his reasoning and described his ruling as “raw political activism.” And that ruling probably won’t be sustained by higher courts.
But
don’t be too sure that his sabotage will be overturned. O’Connor’s
abuse of power may be unusually crude, but that sort of behavior is
becoming increasingly common. And it’s not just health care, nor is it
just the courts. What Nancy Pelosi called the “monstrous endgame”
of the Republican assault on health care is just the leading edge of an
attack on multiple fronts, as the G.O.P. tries to overturn the will of
the voters and undermine democracy in general.
For
while we may congratulate ourselves on the strength of our political
institutions, in the end institutions consist of people and fulfill
their roles only as long as the people in them respect their intended
purpose. Rule of law depends not just on what is written down, but also
on the behavior of those who interpret and enforce that rule.
If
these people don’t regard themselves as servants of the law first,
partisans second, if they won’t subordinate their political goals to
their duty to preserve the system, laws become meaningless and only
power matters.
And what we’re seeing
in America — what we’ve actually been seeing for years, although much of
the news media and political establishment has refused to acknowledge
it — is an invasion of our institutions by right-wing partisans whose
loyalty is to party, not principle. This invasion is corroding the
Republic, and the corrosion is already very far advanced.
I
say “right-wing” advisedly. There are bad people in both parties, as
there are in all walks of life. But the parties are structurally
different. The Democratic Party is a loose coalition of interest groups,
but the modern Republican Party is dominated by “movement
conservatism,” a monolithic structure held together by big money — often
deployed stealthily
— and the closed intellectual ecosystem of Fox News and other partisan
media. And the people who rise within this movement are, to a far
greater degree than those on the other side, apparatchiks, political
loyalists who can be counted on not to stray from the party line.
Republicans
have been stuffing the courts with such people for decades; O’Connor
was appointed by George W. Bush. That’s why his ruling, no matter how
bad the legal reasoning, wasn’t a big surprise. The only question was
whether he would imagine himself able to get away with such a travesty.
Obviously he did, and he may well have been right.
But
as I said, it’s not just the courts. Even as Trump and his allies spin
fantasies about sabotage by the “deep state,” the reality is that a
growing number of positions in government agencies are being occupied by
right-wing partisans who care nothing, or actively oppose, their
agencies’ missions. The Environmental Protection Agency is now run by
people who don’t want to protect the environment, Health and Human
Services by people who want to deny Americans health care.
The same takeover by apparatchiks is
taking place in politics. Remember when the role of the Senate was
supposed to be to “advise and consent”? Under Republican control it’s
just plain consent — there is almost literally nothing Trump can do, up
to and including clear evidence of corruption and criminality, that will
induce senators from his party to exercise any kind of oversight.
So
how do people who think and behave this way respond when the public
rejects their agenda? They attempt to use their power to overrule the
democratic process. When Democrats threaten to win elections, they rig
the voting process, as they did in Georgia. When Democrats win despite
election rigging, they strip the offices Democrats win of power, as they
did in Wisconsin. When Democratic policies prevail despite all of that,
they use apparatchik-stuffed courts to strike down legislation on the
flimsiest of grounds.
As David Frum,
the author of “Trumpocracy,” warned a year ago: “If conservatives become
convinced that they cannot win democratically, they will not abandon
conservatism. They will reject democracy.” That’s happening as we speak.
So
Pelosi was right about Reed O’Connor’s ruling being a symptom of a
“monstrous endgame,” but the game in question isn’t just about
perpetuating the assault on health care, it’s about assaulting democracy
in general. And the current state of the endgame is probably just the
beginning; the worst, I fear, is yet to come.
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