
If Donald Trump returns to the White House, he’d bring a better understanding of the system’s vulnerabilities, more willing enablers, and a more focused agenda of retaliation against his adversaries.
by David Frum 
For
 all its marvelous creativity, the human imagination often fails when 
turned to the future. It is blunted, perhaps, by a craving for the 
familiar. We all appreciate that the past includes many moments of 
severe instability, crisis, even radical revolutionary upheaval. We know
 that such things happened years or decades or centuries ago. We cannot 
believe they might happen tomorrow.
When Donald Trump is the 
subject, imagination falters further. Trump operates so far outside the 
normal bounds of human behavior—never mind normal political 
behavior—that it is difficult to accept what he may actually do, even 
when he declares his intentions openly. What’s more, we have experienced
 one Trump presidency already. We can take false comfort from that 
previous experience: We’ve lived through it once. American democracy 
survived. Maybe the danger is less than feared?
In his first 
term, Trump’s corruption and brutality were mitigated by his ignorance 
and laziness. In a second, Trump would arrive with a much better 
understanding of the system’s vulnerabilities, more willing enablers in 
tow, and a much more focused agenda of retaliation against his 
adversaries and impunity for himself. When people wonder what another 
Trump term might hold, their minds underestimate the chaos that would 
lie ahead.
By Election Day 2024, Donald Trump will be in the 
thick of multiple criminal trials. It’s not impossible that he may 
already have been convicted in at least one of them. If he wins the 
election, Trump will commit the first crime of his second term at noon 
on Inauguration Day: His oath to defend the Constitution of the United 
States will be a perjury.
A second Trump term would instantly 
plunge the country into a constitutional crisis more terrible than 
anything seen since the Civil War. Even in the turmoil of the 1960s, 
even during the Great Depression, the country had a functional 
government with the president as its head. But the government cannot 
function with an indicted or convicted criminal as its head. The 
president would be an outlaw, or on his way to becoming an outlaw. For 
his own survival, he would have to destroy the rule of law.
From 
Trump himself and the people around him, we have a fair idea of a second
 Trump administration’s immediate priorities: (1) Stop all federal and 
state cases against Trump, criminal and civil. (2) Pardon and protect 
those who tried to overturn the 2020 election on Trump’s behalf. (3) 
Send the Department of Justice into action against Trump adversaries and
 critics. (4) End the independence of the civil service and fire federal
 officials who refuse to carry out Trump’s commands. (5) If these 
lawless actions ignite protests in American cities, order the military 
to crush them.
A restored Trump would lead the United States into
 a landscape of unthinkable scenarios. Will the Senate confirm Trump 
nominees who were chosen because of their willingness to help the 
president lead a coup against the U.S. government? Will the staff of the
 Justice Department resign? Will people march in the streets? Will the 
military obey or refuse orders to suppress demonstrations?
The 
existing constitutional system has no room for the subversive legal 
maneuvers of a criminal in chief. If a president can pardon himself for 
federal crimes—as Trump would likely try to do—then he could write his 
pardon in advance and shoot visitors to the White House. (For that 
matter, the vice president could murder the president in the Oval Office
 and then immediately pardon herself.) If a president can order the 
attorney general to stop a federal case against him—as Trump would 
surely do—then obstruction of justice becomes a normal prerogative of 
the presidency. If Trump can be president, then the United States owes a
 huge retrospective apology to Richard Nixon. Under the rules of a 
second Trump presidency, Nixon would have been well within his rights to
 order the Department of Justice to stop investigating Watergate and 
then pardon himself and all the burglars for the break-in and cover-up.
After
 Trump was elected in 2016, he was quickly surrounded by prominent and 
influential people who recognized that he was a lawless menace. They 
found ways to restrain a man they regarded as, to quote the reported 
words of Trump’s first secretary of state, “a fucking moron” and, to 
quote his second chief of staff, “the most flawed person I’ve ever met 
in my life,” whose “dishonesty is just astounding.” But there would be 
no Rex Tillerson in a second Trump term; no John Kelly; no Jeff 
Sessions, who as attorney general recused himself from the investigation
 into the president’s connections to Russia, leading to the appointment 
of an independent special counsel.
Since 2021, Trump-skeptical 
Republicans have been pushed out of politics. Representatives Liz Cheney
 and Adam Kinzinger forfeited their seats in the House for defending 
election integrity. Representative Tom Emmer withdrew his bid for House 
speaker over the same offense. The Republican Senate caucus is less 
hospitable to Trump-style authoritarianism—but notice that the younger 
and newer Republican senators (Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, J. D. Vance) tend 
to support Trump’s schemes, while his opponents in the Senate belong to 
the outgoing generation. Trump’s leading rivals for the 2024 nomination 
seldom dare criticize his abuse of power.
Most of the people who 
would staff a second Trump term would be servile tools who have absorbed
 the brutal realities of contemporary Republicanism: defend democracy; 
forfeit your career. Already, an array of technically competent 
opportunists has assembled itself—from within right-wing think tanks and
 elsewhere—and has begun to plan out exactly how to dismantle the 
institutional safeguards against Trump’s corrupt and vengeful impulses. 
Trump’s likely second-term advisers have made clear that they would 
share his agenda of legal impunity and the use of law enforcement 
against his perceived opponents—not only the Biden family, but Trump’s 
own former attorney general and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
If
 Trump wins the presidency again, the whole world will become a theater 
for his politics of revenge and reward. Ukraine will be abandoned to 
Vladimir Putin; Saudi Arabia will collect its dividends for its 
investments in the Trump family.
First-term Trump told aides that
 he wanted to withdraw from NATO. Second-term Trump would choose aides 
who would not talk him out of it. Other partners, too, would have to 
adjust to the authoritarianism and corruption of a second Trump term. 
Liberals in Israel and India would find themselves isolated as the U.S. 
turned toward reaction and authoritarianism at home; East Asian 
democracies would have to adjust to Trump protectionism and trade wars; 
Mexico’s antidemocratic Morena party would have scope to snuff out free 
institutions provided that it suppressed migration flows to the United 
States.
Anyway, the United States would be too paralyzed by troubles at home to help friends abroad.
If
 Trump is elected, it very likely won’t be with a majority of the 
popular vote. Imagine the scenario: Trump has won the Electoral College 
with 46 percent of the vote because third-party candidates funded by 
Republican donors successfully splintered the anti-Trump coalition. 
Having failed to win the popular vote in each of the past three 
elections, Trump has become president for the second time. On that thin 
basis, his supporters would try to execute his schemes of personal 
impunity and political vengeance.
In this scenario, Trump 
opponents would have to face a harsh reality: The U.S. electoral system 
has privileged a strategically located minority, led by a lawbreaking 
president, over the democratic majority. One side outvoted the other. 
The outvoted nonetheless won the power to govern.
The outvoted 
would happily justify the twist of events in their favor. “We are a 
republic, not a democracy,” many said in 2016. Since that time, the 
outvoted have become more outspoken against democracy. As Senator Mike 
Lee tweeted a month before the 2020 election: “Democracy isn’t the 
objective.”
So long as minority rule seems an occasional or 
accidental result, the majority might go along. But once aware that the 
minority intends to engineer its power to last forever—and to use it to 
subvert the larger legal and constitutional system—the majority may 
cease to be so accepting. One outcome of a second Trump term may be an 
American version of the massive demonstrations that filled Tel Aviv 
streets in 2023, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tried to remake 
Israel’s court system.
And what might follow that? In 2020, 
Trump’s advisers speculated about the possibility of using the Army to 
crush protests against Trump’s plans to overturn that year’s election. 
Now those in Trump’s circle are apparently thinking further ahead. Some 
reportedly want to prepare in advance to use the Insurrection Act to 
convert the military into a tool of Trump’s authoritarian project. It’s 
an astonishing possibility. But Trump is thinking about it, so everybody
 else must—including the senior command of the U.S. military.
If a
 president can summon an investigation of his opponents, or summon the 
military to put down protests, then suddenly our society would no longer
 be free. There would be no more law, only legalized persecution of 
political opponents. It has always been Trump’s supreme political wish 
to wield both the law and institutional violence as personal weapons of 
power—a wish that many in his party now seem determined to help him 
achieve.
That grim negative ideal is the core ballot question in 
2024. If Trump is defeated, the United States can proceed in its 
familiar imperfect way to deal with the many big problems of our time: 
the wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, climate change, educational 
standards and equal opportunity, economic growth and individual living 
standards, and so on. Stopping Trump would not represent progress on any
 of those agenda items. But stopping Trump would preserve the 
possibility of progress, by keeping alive the constitutional-democratic 
structure of the United States.
A second Trump presidency, 
however, is the kind of shock that would overwhelm all other issues. It 
would mark the turn onto a dark path, one of these rips between “before”
 and “after” that a society can never reverse. Even if the harm is 
contained, it can never be fully undone, as the harm of January 6, 2021,
 can never be undone. The long tradition of peaceful transitions of 
power was broken that day, and even though the attempt to stop the 
transition by violence was defeated, the violence itself was not 
expunged. The schemes and plots of a second Trump term may be defeated 
too. Yet every future would-be dictator will know: A president can 
attempt a coup and, if stopped, still return to office to try again.
As
 we now understand from memoirs and on-the-record comments, many of 
Trump’s own Cabinet appointees and senior staff were horrified by the 
president they served. The leaders of his own party in Congress feared 
and hated him. The GOP’s deepest-pocketed donors have worked for three 
years to nominate somebody, anybody, else. Yet even so, Trump’s 
co-partisans are converging upon him. They are convincing themselves 
that something can justify forgiving Trump’s first attempted coup and 
enabling a second: taxes, border control, stupid comments by “woke” 
college students.
For democracy to continue, however, the 
democratic system itself must be the supreme commitment of all major 
participants. Rules must matter more than outcomes. If not, the system 
careens toward breakdown—as it is careening now.
When Benjamin 
Franklin famously said of the then-new Constitution, “A republic, if you
 can keep it,” he was not suggesting that the republic might be 
misplaced absentmindedly. He foresaw that ambitious, ruthless characters
 would arise to try to break the republic, and that weak, venal 
characters might assist them. Americans have faced Franklin’s challenge 
since 2016, in a story that has so far had some villains, many 
heroes—and just enough good luck to tip the balance. It would be 
dangerous to continue to count on luck to do the job. 
ATLANTIC
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