Opinion
Guest Essay
My Fellow
Republicans, It’s Time to Say ‘Enough’ With Trump
Oct. 29,
2024
By J.
Michael Luttig
Judge Luttig
was appointed by President George H.W. Bush and served on the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit from 1991 to 2006.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/29/opinion/donald-trump-oath.html?searchResultPosition=1
We Americans
live in faith with our Constitution and with the past generations of Americans
who swore to protect it and fought to defend it. One week from today, we will
decide whether Donald Trump is fit to be president of the United States again.
He is not. When we entrusted our Constitution and our democracy to him before,
he betrayed us. Campaigning for the presidency again, he now promises to exact
vengeance against his fellow Americans whom he deems “the enemy from within,”
those who have dared to challenge his betrayal, an enemies list that includes
Republicans and Democrats alike.
There could
be no higher duty of American citizenship than to decisively repudiate a man
who betrayed the nation when he was previously entrusted with the highest
office in the land and now threatens the persecution of American citizens who
have crossed him. In the almost 250 years since the founding of the nation, no
president before Donald Trump has ever so betrayed America.
This is not
a difficult decision for voters, though my fellow Republicans and conservatives
will finally have to decide what they have long hoped they would never have to
decide — whether to put their country above their party. Republicans and
conservatives have always proudly claimed they would be the first to put the
country above all else when the time came. That time has come. If Republicans
are unwilling to put America before their party now, they will never do so.
They must be honest with themselves.
All
Americans, but especially Republicans, will live with their decision the rest
of their lives. This election is anything but politics as usual, no matter how
desperately Donald Trump and the G.O.P. have tried to make it that.
As a lawyer
and a judge, I have devoted my entire life to America’s democracy, Constitution
and rule of law. I took solemn oaths to preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution against all enemies, foreign as well as domestic. While most
Americans do not literally take oaths to preserve and defend the Constitution,
all Americans freely assume those same oaths and they should take their
obligations seriously every single day of their lives without any reservation.
The reason America is still the envy of the world after almost two and a half
centuries is because so many of its citizens do take seriously their
obligations as citizens.
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The powers
of the presidency are vast and its responsibilities commensurately immense. It
is for those reasons that a president has no higher obligations than to
America’s democracy, Constitution and rule of law, the foundational
cornerstones of our Republic. Through his words and deeds, Donald Trump has
over and again demonstrated his palpable contempt for those cornerstones of
America’s grand experiment in democratic self-government. He has proved himself
to be an anti-democratic, anti-Constitution candidate for the presidency of the
United States.
I am 70
years old and I have always voted for the Republican candidates for president
because I never doubted they would honor their sacred obligations to our
democracy and our Constitution. I have never doubted the Democratic candidates
for the presidency would honor their obligations, either. But today, I do not
recognize the Republican Party that I have known across my lifetime. It is not
the Republican Party of Abraham Lincoln or Ronald Reagan and neither is it
conservative, as that term has been inspiringly invoked by conservatives since
the founding. Today, the party of Lincoln and Reagan stands only for one man
and that man’s disfigurement of both Republicanism and conservatism.
As I wrote
in August when I endorsed Kamala Harris for president, Mr. Trump drove a stake
through the heart of America’s democracy and Constitution on Jan. 6, 2021,
inciting insurrectionists with his speech on the Ellipse and other actions in
an attempt to overturn the presidential election he knew he lost to Joe Biden
and prevent the peaceful transfer of power for the first time in almost 250
years.
For his
grave offenses that dark January day nearly four years ago, he will forever
have the ignominious distinction of being the first American president since
the founding to be charged with crimes against the United States. With the
assistance of a willing Supreme Court, he succeeded in delaying trial and
accountability for his betrayal of the nation until after this election. Now,
as he wished, he will never be held accountable for his offenses unless the
American people first hold him accountable at the ballot box on Nov. 5.
Yet, to this
very day, the former president; his running mate, Senator JD Vance; and much of
the Republican Party persist in the fraudulent claim that the 2020 election was
stolen from them and, in breathtaking defiance of American democracy and the
Constitution, that they can be trusted to ensure a peaceful transfer of power
only if Donald Trump wins. That is not democracy and the rule of law. It is
autocracy and lawlessness. Respect for the electoral will of the American
people and for the peaceful transfer of power is a central tenet of our
constitutional self-government. Without unhesitating adherence to that
fundamental tenet of our Republic by every person who assumes the presidency,
America would have neither democracy nor rule by law. Its Constitution would be
meaningless words, not magisterial commands. Its greatest strengths would be
its terminal weaknesses.
America’s
democracy and the rule of law are the only truly consequential stakes in the
2024 presidential election. Yes, there are important policy issues about which
we disagree. But that has always been the case and always will be. In this
election, these policy differences are comparatively inconsequential, if
consequential at all. It is our democracy, Constitution and rule of law that
have made America the envy and the beacon of freedom to the world for almost a
quarter of a millennium, and on the eve of the 2024 presidential election
Donald Trump stands as an imminent danger to those foundational cornerstones of
our nation.
Ms. Harris
is the only candidate who can be trusted to honor the president’s sacred
obligations to America’s democracy, Constitution and rule of law. The vice
president understands and cares about what Donald Trump does not. She calls on
Americans to “stand up for the rule of law. For our democratic ideal. And for
the Constitution of the United States.” She believes we “have the power to
chart a new way forward, one that is worthy of this magnificent country that we
are all blessed to call home.”
America has
never heard those words from Donald Trump. And it never will.
The choice
for America next Tuesday could not be clearer
J. Michael
Luttig was appointed by George H.W. Bush and served on the United States Court
of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit from 1991 to 2006.
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