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Donald Trump is constantly claiming powers he doesnât actually have while ignoring those heâs entitled to. Thatâs the theme of an excellent Jill Colvin [story](:
Threatening to shut down Twitter for flagging false content. Claiming he can âoverrideâ governors who dare to keep churches closed to congregants. Asserting the âabsolute authorityâ to force states to reopen, even when local leaders say itâs too soon.
As she notes, all of this is Trump, as is his failure to fully exploit the Defense Production Act as part of his reaction to the pandemic.
Regular readers will recognize this combination as signs of [presidential weakness]( that nonetheless is dangerous to democratic government. Another way to put it is that itâs the essence of lawlessness. Itâs not that Trump necessarily breaks laws (although he surely has done that), but that he appears oblivious to the whole idea of the rule of law â the idea that there are rules that apply to everyone, including the president.
Another way of looking at it is that Trump doesnât seem to understand that heâs been hired to do a job, and that he has more than 300 million bosses. As with any job, it comes with written rules, and an employee â thatâs what he is â must thoroughly master the terms of employment if he or she hopes to perform well. Instead, Trump seems to believe heâs won some sort of honor, and it entitles him to things. Thatâs simply not the reality of the presidency. Sure, there are perks (as there are with many jobs), but more than anything, itâs employment.
The worst part of this is that failing to recognize and uphold the rule of law is a fundamental abuse of power by the government employee whose job it is to âtake Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.â That is the core of his obligation to âpreserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.â It is the heart of the presidency.
Now, for normal presidents this gets complicated very quickly. Defending the rule of law is not incompatible with disputing what exactly the law means, including the rules constraining the president. Every modern president (and at least many of those before the modern era) has pushed around the edges of what the Oval Office is able to do. All of them fought to further enlarge an office already loaded with far more powers than their 18th- and 19th-century predecessors had. We all expect presidents these days to do things that were simply not part of the job for Martin Van Buren or James Garfield, and we provide them with a large White House staff to fight for the presidentâs program. So itâs hard to say that this or that attempt at presidential power crosses a line into autocracy.
But Trump? His entire approach to the presidency ignores all the lines about what heâs authorized to do and what he isnât. Itâs true, as my Bloomberg Opinion colleague [Francis Wilkinson]( and the political scientist [Dave Hopkins]( say, that the Republican Party paved the trail Trump is on and are deeply implicated in all of this. But itâs also true that Trump is very different than George W. Bush, George H. W. Bush, or Ronald Reagan in this regard. Itâs always hard to tell whatâs in someoneâs mind, but Iâve never heard anything from Trump that suggested any real respect for the rule of law.
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1. Chryl N. Laird, Julian J. Wamble and Ismail K. White at the Monkey Cage on [Biden and black voters](.
2. Ed Kilgore on [Trumpâs convention dreams](.
3. Amy Walter on [Trumpâs popularity and the economy](. Not sure I agree â not sure I donât.
4. David Weigel on [Trump and masks](.
5. Annie Lowrey on [the economy and young adults](.
6. And my Bloomberg Opinion colleague Timothy L. O'Brien on [Trumpâs war, sort of, on Twitter.](
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