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Dougal's avatar

As a conservative with libertarian instincts, my impression is that Trump incited a period of gross illiberalism on the left to the point there were no liberals left in the last decade, at least not among those with their hands on the levers of power. If you view the machinations of Obama/Hillary Democrats in attempting to deal with Trump in his first campaign and term as president, you see fascist or Bolshevik tactics deployed to destroy him. This continued throughout his first term and during the four years of Biden in which he was subjected to lawfare, the utter politicization of the legal system to destroy opponents. This was devious illiberalism in which the power of the state was used to destroy the leader of a surging political movement that began with the Tea Party uprising during Obama's first term.

Trump and Musk are what i call working libertarians in style and in most of their policies. Their hostility to leviathan government is pronounced because they have experienced it on many levels. As Trump said in his debate with Hillary, "I know the system is corrupt because I use it." Now he's getting his revenge of sorts and to my mind, restoring central government (which has become a Swamp) to something more in line with the American character, which is largely hostile to creeping European socialism.

I think Trump's movement will last because its younger stalwarts like Vance, DeSantis, Rubio and others will be fully prepared to continue what is, if not a revolution, a rapid restructuring of the current state of federalism. Remember, Bill Clinton did the same thing in a much more quiet way when he reduced the federal bureaucracy by over 400,000 jobs, many of them managerial, between 1993 and 1999. It was a more gradual than what appears to be going on now, but it was still a dramatic reduction in bureaucracy, which is what Americans generally want.

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Ed Merta's avatar

I think these are great questions that definitely need answering. My fear is that liberals will have to work out the answers not in a calm, year-long period of retreat and reflection but instead under an intense blitzkrieg against the constitutional order, here and now, on a timetable of months. The collective body of work of the New Right intellectuals at the heart of administration policy suggests to me a concrete plan unfolding over the course of this calendar year. The plan is evident, I would argue, in the longtime record of statements by, among others, J.D. Vance, Russell Vought, Stephen Miller, Michael Anton, and their associates outside of government, like Patrick Deneen, Adrian Vermeule, Curtis Yarvin, and Steve Bannon.

The plan, roughly, is to: (1) seize control of the executive branch, unfettered by serious legal constraints; (2) use executive branch power, in the form of fiscal policy, regulations, investigations, and litigation, to break, dominate, and replace the leadership of private sector institutions like universities, professional associations, corporate management, NGOs, philanthropies, and media. From what I can tell, stage (1) is slated for implementation largely in this calendar year, probably culminating in either favorable Supreme Court decisions or creative evasion, subversion, and defiance of same. Stage (2) would then unfold over the remainder of the current Trump term.

Success in that effort would make the executive branch the dominant arbiter of legality and economic power in American life, displacing Congress, the courts, and private sector actors. It's doubtful to me that free and fair elections could unfold under those circumstances. John's essay above seems to assume that such elections will be possible. Maybe they will, but approaching this problem like an intelligence analyst trying to divine enemy intent in wartime, I infer that the Trump inner circle likely wants to eliminate its enemies from serious contention for national electoral success. I would expect state GOP leaders to emulate the national leadership in this regard.

As this situation becomes clearer, there will likely be at least an attempt at large-scale street protests by the progressive left (i.e. "the Groups") and its logistical backers among billionaires and elements of corporate America. The Trump administration, according to media accounts, seems willing to use force against such protests, including domestic deployment of US military forces. How the Joint Chiefs of Staff and combatant commands react to such a scenario will be a key variable.

In sum, the questions John sets forth for American liberalism will probably have to be answered not in a period of retreat and reflection, anticipating future elections, but instead under pressure of time, resources, and uncertainty in a constitutional crisis, fraught with potential for mass violence and extreme scenarios without precedent in the history of the United States -- but with plenty of precedent in the history of other countries. This is a dark conclusion, which I've found echoed by commentators like Yascha Mounk, Larry Diamond, and Damon Linker. I think it has to be the starting point for planning, though. This isn't 1985, after Mondale's defeat, or 1973, after McGovern's. It's the 1780s, 1860s, or 1930s. A new order for the ages is here, for better or worse.

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