Opinion
The
Editorial Board
America
Makes a Perilous Choice
Nov. 6,
2024, 5:37 a.m. ET
By The
Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/06/opinion/trump-wins.html
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
American
voters have made the choice to return Donald Trump to the White House, setting
the nation on a precarious course that no one can fully foresee.
The founders
of this country recognized the possibility that voters might someday elect an
authoritarian leader and wrote safeguards into the Constitution, including
powers granted to two other branches of government designed to be a check on a
president who would bend and break laws to serve his own ends. And they enacted
a set of rights — most crucially the First Amendment — for citizens to
assemble, speak and protest against the words and actions of their leader.
Over the
next four years, Americans must be cleareyed about the threat to the nation and
its laws that will come from its 47th president and be prepared to exercise
their rights in defense of the country and the people, laws, institutions and
values that have kept it strong.
It can’t be
ignored that millions of Americans voted for a candidate even some of his
closest supporters acknowledge to be deeply flawed — convinced that he was more
likely to change and fix what they regarded as the nation’s urgent problems:
high prices, an infusion of immigrants, a porous southern border and economic
policies that have flowed unequally through society. Some cast their votes out
of a profound dissatisfaction with the status quo, politics or the state of
American institutions more broadly.
Whatever
drove this decision among these voters, however, all Americans should now be
wary of an incoming Trump administration that is likely to put a top priority
on amassing unchecked power and punishing its perceived enemies, both of which
Mr. Trump has repeatedly vowed to do. All Americans, regardless of their party
or politics, should insist that the fundamental pillars of the nation’s
democracy — including constitutional checks and balances, fair-minded federal
prosecutors and judges, an impartial election system and basic civil rights —
be preserved against an assault that he has already begun and has said he would
continue.
At this
point, there can be no illusions about who Donald Trump is and how he intends
to govern. He showed us in his first term and in the years after he left office
that he has no respect for the law, let alone the values, norms and traditions
of democracy. As he takes charge of the world’s most powerful state, he is
transparently motivated only by the pursuit of power and the preservation of
the cult of personality he has built around himself. These stark assessments
are striking in part because they are held not just by his critics but also by
those who served most closely with him.
We are a
nation that has always emerged from a crucible with its ideals intact and often
toughened and sharpened. The institutions of our government, hardened by nearly
250 years of disputation, turmoil, assassinations and wars, held firm when Mr.
Trump assailed them four years ago. And Americans know how to counter Mr.
Trump’s worst instincts — actions that were unjust, immoral or illegal —
because they did so, over and over, during his first administration. Civil
servants, members of Congress, members of his own party and people he appointed
to high office often stood in the way of the former president’s plans, and
other institutions of our society, including the free press and independent law
enforcement agencies, held him accountable to the public.
Mr. Trump
and his movement have all but taken over the Republican Party. Yet it is also
important to remember that Mr. Trump can’t run for another term. From the day
he enters the White House, he will be, in effect, a lame-duck president. The
Constitution limits him to two terms. Congress has the power — and for some
ambitious Republicans, perhaps the political incentive — to set a course away
from Mr. Trump’s antidemocratic agenda, if it chooses to pursue it.
Governors
and legislatures across the nation have spent months shoring up their state
laws and Constitutions to protect civil rights and liberties, including access
to reproductive and gender-affirming health care. Even states that voted
overwhelmingly for Mr. Trump, including Kentucky, Ohio and Kansas, have
rejected the most extreme positions on abortion. Other institutions of American
civil society will play a crucial role in challenging the Trump administration
in the courts, in our communities and in the protests that are sure to return.
The rest of
the world, too, has no illusions about the leader who will soon again represent
the United States on the world stage. The countries of the NATO alliance were
shocked, during the first Trump administration, by his willingness to undermine
that long and valuable partnership. But European nations, defying Mr. Trump’s
predictions, not only came together with the United States in the face of
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but also expanded their ranks right up to Russia’s
border.
For the
Democratic Party, rear-guard action as the political opposition will not be
enough. The party must also take a hard look at why it lost the election. It
took too long to recognize that President Biden was not capable of running for
a second term. It took too long to recognize that large swaths of their
progressive agenda were alienating voters, including some of the most loyal
supporters of their party. And Democrats have struggled for three elections now
to settle on a persuasive message that resonates with Americans from both
parties who have lost faith in the system — which pushed skeptical voters
toward the more obviously disruptive figure, even though a large majority of
Americans acknowledge his serious faults. If the Democrats are to effectively
oppose Mr. Trump, it must be not just through resisting his worst impulses but
also by offering a vision of what they would do to improve the lives of all
Americans and respond to anxieties that people have about the direction of the
country and how they would change it.
The test for
members of this new Congress will begin soon after they take their oath. The
president-elect has promised to surround himself in his second term with
enablers prepared to pledge loyalty to him, who will be willing to do whatever
he commands. But a president needs the Senate to approve many of those
appointments. Senators can stop the most extreme or unqualified candidates from
taking cabinet positions like defense secretary and attorney general, as well
as seats on the Supreme Court and the federal bench. They can act to keep
clearly unfit candidates from holding any powerful position. The Senate did
that in 2020, when it blocked Mr. Trump’s attempts to seat unqualified people
on the board of the Federal Reserve, and the chamber should not hesitate to do
so again.
Perhaps the
most important responsibility lies with all of those who will serve in a second
Trump administration. Those he appoints as attorney general, as secretary of
defense and to other top leadership roles should expect that he may ask them to
carry out illegal acts or violate their oaths to the Constitution on his
behalf, as he did in his first term. We urge them to recognize that whatever
pledge of loyalty he may demand, their first loyalty is to their country.
Standing up to Mr. Trump is possible, and it is the duty of every American
public servant when appropriate.
But the
final responsibility for ensuring the continuity of America’s enduring values
lies with its voters. Those who supported Mr. Trump in this election should
closely observe his conduct in office to see if it matches their hopes and
expectations, and if it does not, they should make their disappointment known
and cast votes in the 2026 midterms and in 2028 to put the country back on
course. Those who opposed him should not hesitate to raise alarms when he
abuses his power, and if he attempts to use government power to retaliate
against critics, the world will be watching.
Benjamin
Franklin famously admonished the American people that the nation was “a
republic, if you can keep it.” Mr. Trump’s election poses a grave threat to
that republic, but he will not determine the long-term fate of American
democracy. That outcome remains in the hands of the American people. It is the
work of the next four years.
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
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