Opinion
The
Editorial Board
Now Is
Not the Time to Tune Out
Feb. 8,
2025, 7:00 a.m. ET
By The
Editorial Board
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.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/08/opinion/trump-musk-public-attention.html
Don’t get
distracted. Don’t get overwhelmed. Don’t get paralyzed and pulled into the
chaos that President Trump and his allies are purposely creating with the
volume and speed of executive orders; the effort to dismantle the federal
government; the performative attacks on immigrants, transgender people and the
very concept of diversity itself; the demands that other countries accept
Americans as their new overlords; and the dizzying sense that the White House
could do or say anything at any moment. All of this is intended to keep the
country on its back heel so President Trump can blaze ahead in his drive for
maximum executive power, so no one can stop the audacious, ill-conceived and
frequently illegal agenda being advanced by his administration. For goodness
sake, don’t tune out.
The actions
of this presidency need to be tracked, and when they cross moral or legal
lines, they need to be challenged, boldly and thoughtfully, with the confidence
that the nation’s system of checks and balances will prove up to the task.
There are reasons for concern on that front, of course. The Republican-led
Congress has so far abdicated its role as a coequal branch of government, from
allowing its laws and spending directives to be systematically cast aside to
fearfully assenting to the president stocking his cabinet with erratic,
unqualified loyalists. Much of civil society — from the business community, to
higher education, to parts of the corporate media — has been disturbingly
quiet, even acquiescent.
But there
are encouraging signs as well. The courts, the most important check on a
president who aims to expand his legally authorized powers and remove any
guardrails, so far have held, blocking a number of Mr. Trump’s initiatives.
States have also taken action, with several Democratic attorneys general suing
over Mr. Trump’s attempts to freeze federal grant funding and end birthright
citizenship and vowing to fight Elon Musk’s team’s access to federal payment
systems containing personal information. State or local officials are also
defending their laws in the face of federal immigration raids and fighting Mr.
Trump’s executive order barring gender-affirming medical care for transgender
children. And independent-minded journalism organizations have continued
excellent reporting on the fire hose of excesses of these early days, bringing
essential information to the public.
None of this
is to say that Mr. Trump shouldn’t have the opportunity to govern.
Seventy-seven million Americans cast ballots to put Mr. Trump back in the White
House, and the Republican Party, now fully remade in service of the MAGA
movement, holds majorities in both houses of Congress. Elections, it is often
noted, have consequences. But is this unconstitutional overhaul of the American
government — far more sweeping, haphazard and cruel than anything he campaigned
on — really what those voters signed up for? To put America’s system of checks
and balances, its alliances and its national security at risk? Because, beyond
the bluster, that is what Mr. Trump, Mr. Musk and their supporters are doing.
Three weeks
into the second Trump term, here are a handful of the places where Americans
can’t afford to turn away:
Elon Musk’s
Executive Takeover. The problem is not that Mr. Musk is unelected, it’s that he
is breaking the law. Not even a full-time government employee, he is trying to
unilaterally shut down or dismantle entire federal agencies and departments,
ignoring congressional mandates — this is prohibited by the Constitution. He
and his team are behind the announced buyout offers to millions of civil
servants — including the entire C.I.A. work force — and have effectively forced
out top officials whom he has no power to fire. He is on a mission to rampage
through the government’s confidential payment systems with an anarchist’s glee,
deciding on his own which aspects of federal spending are legitimate, and
substituting his instinctual embrace of conspiracy theories for any effort to
understand the government functions he’s undermining.
Both the
president and Mr. Musk seem to relish that most of their actions are plainly
illegal, daring the courts to step in and stop them, on the theory that these
laws are flawed to begin with. At the same time, you have the richest man in
the world leading this effort, still holding interests in his private
companies, which do billions of dollars in business with and are regulated by
the federal government. It’s a level of conflict of interest unlike anything
we’ve seen in the modern era.
The
Administration vs. Public Officials (a.k.a. Trump’s Enemies). Along with
terminating more than a dozen members of the U.S. Attorneys Office in
Washington who’d worked on cases involving the Jan. 6, 2021, riot, the Trump
administration began collecting the names of thousands of F.B.I. personnel who
helped to investigate crimes associated with the attack on the Capitol. Several
top-ranking officials at the agency have already been fired. The move offered
an early glimpse at how Mr. Trump and his nominee to run the F.B.I., Kash Patel
— who published a literal enemies list of “Executive Branch Deep State” members
— might use federal law enforcement against the president’s political
opponents. In perhaps the most disturbing warning to those who might think to
question or defy him, Mr. Trump stripped several of his former advisers of
security protection that was deemed necessary given credible threats by the
Iranian government to assassinate them for actions they took under his direct
order.
The
President’s Imperial Bluster and Attacks on Allies. Mr. Trump has spent weeks
coyly suggesting the United States is on the verge of illegally seizing
territory on three continents, leaving all levels of consternation in his wake.
Then there are his long-planned, seemingly legal — even if extremely ill
advised — tariffs. All the threats and insults have gained Mr. Trump some
short-term concessions, but none are likely to make America’s economy stronger
or make America safer in the world. Running roughshod over centuries-old
alliances will hurt the targeted countries, but it also could compromise
national security, raise the price of goods, disrupt global commerce, benefit
adversaries like China and Russia that are eager to fill the void of an
increasingly distrusted America.
Public
Health Imperiled. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vocal vaccine skeptic, has not been
confirmed as Mr. Trump’s health and human services secretary yet. But the
administration is already taking steps to weaken and wreck public and global
health protections. On Thursday, The Times reported that the administration
plans to reduce the staff of more than 10,000 Americans at the U.S. Agency for
International Development to only about 300 people, and cancel nearly 800
awards and contracts the agency administered. The president — much less Mr.
Musk — cannot shut down a federal agency without a vote by Congress. To do so
is also illegal under the Constitution. More than half of U.S.A.I.D.’s spending
in 2023 went to health programs intended to stop the spread of diseases, such
as polio, Ebola, tuberculosis, H.I.V./AIDS and malaria or to humanitarian
assistance to respond to emergencies and help stabilize war-torn regions. If
you care about preventing the next pandemic or the pressures of global
migration, U.S.A.I.D. is an investment you should want the United States to
make.
The
President’s Anti-Civil Rights Blitz. Mr. Trump has issued a flurry of executive
orders and pronouncements that set back decades of progress on civil rights and
often openly defy the Constitution. He has especially targeted transgender
Americans and has threatened federal funding for public schools that do not
adhere to right-wing ideology about how history and race should be discussed.
He has also found nearly daily excuses to rail against diversity, equity and
inclusion policies, even blaming D.E.I. for the Jan. 29 air crash in Washington
and strongly implying that any air traffic controller who is a woman or not
white is inferior and has been given a job for the wrong reasons. And the new
attorney general, Pam Bondi, announced on Wednesday that private companies that
choose to maintain their own diversity and inclusion policies could be targeted
for “criminal investigations.”
America
faces a new reality, and it demands wisdom, endurance and courage. The United
States is now led by a president who appears willing to stampede over any
person, law, congressional statute or country that stands in his way. He is
driven by impulse and is disinterested in rules, history or reality.
How
Americans and the world handle such a president will determine much about the
next four years, and it will ask much from all of us. We must meet the moment.
Mr. Trump won the election fair and square, but his position is that of
president, not king or god-emperor. Every time Congress allows him to exceed
his constitutional role, it encourages more anti-democratic behavior and
weakens the legislature’s ability to check further erosion of the norms and
values that have helped make this nation the freest, richest and strongest in
the world.


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