Strongman Politics

I’ve discussed extensively the policy choices facing Americans in the 2020 presidential election and why I think Joe Biden’s policies would result in an improved world. However, I believe the best critique of Donald Trump’s candidacy doesn’t just dryly compare policy, but also takes into account all the “extracurriculars” that come with him.

As a warning, this post will be more partisan than other things I’ve written. I’d like to catalog some of the outrageous things Trump has done or said because there is a nebulous concern with Trump’s presidency that pure policy discussions can’t convey. Again, I’ll be aiming towards a center-right audience because that’s who I need to convince, but I also can’t imagine I’ll be saying anything new; Trump is obnoxious, self-serving, and corrupt and this is well known. I admit, I’m not sure why that knowledge hasn’t convinced conservatives to dump Trump, but generally speaking I think it’s true that conservatives have stuck with the president. Thus, in my last post, I mostly ignored these more outrageous discussions in favor of more dry policy comparisons. Nonetheless, for my own sanity, I think it’s worth reiterating just a small fraction of what the president has done over the last four years. Maybe putting it all in one place will prove more convincing than hearing constant headlines for years.

Before I get to Trump, I should point out that the Left has its own nebulous darkness on the horizon. Nothing I say here should be construed to downplay that threat. Manifestations of these bad ideas on the Left include broad attacks on the culture of open discourse and free speech, advancement of racism and segregation, support for radical violence, and aggrandizement of proven failed policies of state control of the means of production.

The reason for my focus in this essay on Donald Trump despite these concerns about the Left is twofold. One is that Donald Trump is tied directly to the worst ideas on the Right. Joe Biden is not similarly bound to the above enumerated problems. Secondly, there is a strong pushback on the Left against these more radical ideas. For example, countervailing groups on the Left established the Neoliberal Project, wrote the Letter on Justice and Open Debate in Harper’s Magazine this year, and most directly, decisively elected Joe Biden over Bernie Sanders in the primary.

On the Right however, conservatism has collapsed in the face of Trumpism. The Republican Party decided to forego writing a party platform this year in favor of stating they will “enthusiastically support the President’s America First agenda”. Meanwhile the Republican National Committee, the national organization that is responsible for electing Republican candidates up and down the ballot, merged its fundraising and spending with Trump’s reelection campaign, an unprecedented move reflecting Trump’s complete domination of the political Right.

Polarization

One of the first things that comes to mind about President Trump is his unpresidential behavior. He constantly interrupted Joe Biden during the first presidential debate, and Chris Wallace entered into several verbal altercations with the president, loudly pointing out that he had agreed to these rules he was constantly breaking. He spends press conferences with foreign leaders complaining about his own petty grievances instead of actually discussing the visit. He lies constantly and retweets conspiracy theories. Does any of this matter?

I would argue that one result is continued pressure on political polarization. At the same debate, Trump was asked to condemn white supremacy and seemed unwilling to denounce anyone who might support him. Joe Biden, on the other hand easily dealt with the issue by broadly condemning violence in any form, something he has done continually since May. Just after the debate, Trump criticized Representative Ilhan Omar, not for policy disagreements, but mostly based on where she was born despite her being an American citizen: “She’s telling us how to run our country. How did you do where you came from? How’s your country doing?” Again, this pushes us further from actual policy discussions, discussions which we should be having.

In fact, last year, Donald Trump told several sitting congresswomen that they ought to “go back” to their countries and fix them before telling “us” how to run “our” country. I have been concerned with the overzealous accusations of racism coming from leftists, but despite their misuse of the accusation, prejudice is still wrong. Attacking people for qualities they do not control, like where they were born, rather than engaging with their ideas is immoral and weak. In fact, three of the representatives were born in the United States, and the last came to America when she was 12. But that doesn’t matter, these are American citizens, elected to represent other American citizens, and it’s disturbing that the president does not identify them as Americans because of what they look like.

This is polarizing and it is bad for our country. The policies and arguments put forward by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Ilhan Omar are often terrible, and those policies ought to opposed. But when the president attacks them for where they were born or what they look like, it appears that the choices are bad socialist ideas or bigotry, which alienates Americans and forces a false choice.

I won’t go into more details on other incidents, but it’s worth noting the president’s polarizing behavior here isn’t unique. He said people in the suburbs won’t have “low income housing” built in their neighborhoods. He said John McCain was only a war hero because he got captured and he likes “people who weren’t captured”. He made no attempt to deny the QAnon conspiracy theory when asked about it and instead said he appreciated that they like him, and Trump continued to advocate for hydrochloroquine as a COVID treatment months after the FDA had cancelled clinical trials because of its ineffectiveness.

Trump’s polarizing actions should disqualify him from the presidency. We need to focus on open discussion and debate, not increasing tribalism. Trump is incapable of moving the country in that direction.

Authoritarianism

Donald Trump has authoritarian tendencies. He has praised Kim Jong-un, he’s commended Xi Jinping installing himself as Chinese leader for life, and he’s even publicly sided with Vladimir Putin over American intelligence over whether there was Russian intelligence operations during the 2016 election. Focusing on specific actions, Trump cleared peaceful protesters outside the White House with pepper spray and police in riot gear in order to get an absurd photo op of him holding a Bible outside a church. Police attacked an Australian journalist live on TV. He also attempted to fire Bob Mueller as special counsel when he was being investigated, but White House counsel Don McGahn threatened to resign and he backed down. Recently, Trump has urged Attorney General Bill Barr to go after his political enemies with the Justice Department.

Trump also has a poor relationship with democratic elections. He has repeatedly sought to undermine his own election in 2016 (the election he won!) claiming, without evidence as usual, that millions of fraudulent votes were cast. Trump established a commission to look into this fraud, which seemingly dissolved without issuing a report or finding any evidence. Looking ahead, Trump has called for the 2020 election to be delayed, and when asked about the election, he has repeatedly refused to say he will accept the results. Note Biden had no problems answering Chris Wallace’s softball question, stating he would wait to declare victory until the election was certified and would concede if he lost. This isn’t particularly difficult or controversial, unless you are Donald Trump! Apparently the rule of law simply does not apply to him. Before and since the debate, Trump has continued to undermine the legitimacy of the election and voting by mail in ballots, even though many states have been voting by mail for years. Given the circumstances of the pandemic and logistical challenges of rapidly expanding mail in voting, Trump ought to be taking steps to make sure the election is legitimate and transparent, yet he has completely failed to do so.

Refusing to accept the principles of the rule of law, peaceful transfers of power, and election legitimacy ought to disqualify Trump from the ballots of voters. These are authoritarian strongman tactics, and they ought to be harshly condemned.

Corruption

It’s hard to distinguish Trump’s corruption from his authoritarian tendencies. Unlike staunchly ideological leaders who might wield state power and abridge the rights of their citizens in the name of communism or ethnic nationalism, Trump seems more comfortable with simply wielding state power for his own personal gain. Regardless of where its categorized, Trump’s administration is deeply corrupt.

Trump has reserved his pardon power almost exclusively for his political allies. Roger Stone was pardoned after lying to investigators to cover for Trump (although his sentence was excessive). Trump also pardoned former Sheriff Joe Arpaio, one of the most abusive law enforcement officers in the country, who was in prison after ignoring many court orders about his inhuman treatment of inmates. Arpaio had endorsed Trump in 2016. Trump has also rewarded his family members with high-ranking offices in the West Wing. On the other hand, Trump fired Alexander Vindman and Ambassador Gordon Sondland after he was acquitted from impeachment charges in February. Both testified against the president.

Speaking of impeachment, Trump was impeached for abusing his office. On a 2019 official diplomatic call, Donald Trump asked the president of Ukraine to look into a wild conspiracy theory about a company in Ukraine having a copy of Hillary Clinton’s email server. Trump also asked the president to look into Joe Biden, his political rival, for wrongdoing. At the same time, foreign aid appropriated by Congress had been held up, according to Donald Trump’s chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, specifically to put pressure on Ukraine to investigate this email server. Trump’s EU ambassador Gordon Sondlond also testified that a White House visit was offered to Ukraine in exchange for announcing an investigation into the Bidens, and apparently Mick Mulvaney, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and National Security Advisor John Bolton were all aware. The Trump administration however, blocked all three from testifying.

I know that this became a highly political issue and Trump’s senate trial declined to hear any witnesses along party lines, but I have yet to hear any reason to excuse the president’s behavior. Trump’s own hand picked staff all agree that the president used the office of the president to achieve these self-serving political goals which had nothing to do with the the good of the country.

This is wrong, and this is corrupt. The president cannot use the powerful mechanisms of the state for his own personal ends; we must be a nation of laws where authority is strictly bound to rules that apply to all. When the Senate declined to even hear witnesses to discuss the obvious crimes that Trump had committed, they said this ought to be left up to the electorate. The results of this election ought to reflect our opinion of whether the president is above the law.

Incompetence

Trump isn’t great at accomplishing the things he actually wants to accomplish. Trump has over and over again apparently appointed terrible people to work for him who he is then forced to fire. Trump fired Michael Flynn when indicted for lying to the FBI, H.R. McMaster by tweet, Anthony Scaramucci after 10 days, former RNC chair Reince Priebus and retired General John Kelly as chiefs of staff, Omoraosa Manigault from the Public Liaison Office, and Steve Bannon as chief strategist. Gary Cohn resigned because of Trump’s protectionist policies, and former Secretary of Defense James Mattis resigned in protest of Trump’s foreign policy. Tom Price was forced to resign as HHS Secretary after criticism of his use of private charters and military aircraft for travel, former Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielson was forced to resign when she didn’t stop accepting asylum seekers, Rex Tillerson was fired as Secretary of State after clashing with Trump’s policies for months, and Jeff Sessions was repeatedly abused by President Trump on Twitter for refusing to intervene in the special counsel investigation into Russian interference until Sessions resigned. Such absolute mayhem does not reflect well on the President’s ability to find the “best” people.

Consequently, despite having a Republican majority in both the House and the Senate, Trump was unable to deliver on major pieces of policy like fixing Obamacare or cutting the deficit. Also, we should have a brief reminder of the constant bizarre behavior by the president these past four years. He didn’t have a single policy he could promise when Sean Hannity asked what his second term goals would be. He has also tweeted a conspiracy theory about TV personality Joe Scarborough being involved in a murder in 2001, and most recently that Obama had had Seal Team Six murdered. These do not seem like the actions of a competent leader. Regardless of all this chaos, the economy did fairly well until the biggest story of incompetence happened: COVID-19. Trump campaigned on being a good manager and private sector CEO. I’ve expressed in the past that I didn’t think management skills mattered much in politics compared to policy, but every now and then there’s a crisis that needs managing. We got one this year and Trump has abjectly failed.

200,000 Americans are dead directly from the pandemic and the CDC estimates 250k in excess mortality since February. Trump lied to Americans about what he knew about the virus and played it down instead of sounding the alarm. Trump’s CDC and FDA had major failures that delayed testing. Then, in the summer once cases had finally started to drop, instead of trying to continue that trend, he held and has continued to hold crowded rallies. He mocked people for wearing masks, and most importantly, claimed we only had rising case numbers because of better testing. Later, in August, Trump retweeted a claim that COVID had only killed 9,000 Americans. In an Axios interview in July, Trump literally couldn’t understand the reporter talking to him about rising U.S. deaths, simply declaring that you couldn’t use that metric. Not to mention, the White House held an event in the Rose Garden to promote Amy Coney Barrett as their new Supreme Court nominee without good precautions, infecting several members of the Senate Judiciary Committee as well as the President himself. On Saturday, October 10, just two weeks later, a large rally was held on the White House lawn.

The level of incompetence here and the cost in human lives is simply unspeakable.

Future of Conservatism

Finally, returning to appeal more directly conservatives, the American Right is at a fork in the road. The Cold War anti-communist coalition of social conservatives, libertarians, business interests, and nationalists has completely fallen apart. This process has been long in the works, but the schism accelerated in the 2016 election, and now conservatives can choose to be on the side of individual liberty or authoritarianism.

Donald Trump has pulled the Republican Party towards authoritarian nationalism. He abhors the rule of law and the international liberal order, and he undermines the ideas of peaceful transitions of power or a separation of public and personal interest. The GOP party platform literally doesn’t exist. But these authoritarian ideas don’t stem from Trump alone; there are others working to maintain these ideas and platforms into the future, and it has resulted in some disturbing events. Right wing conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer was praised by Trump and even endorsed by Representative Matt Gaetz despite her association with InfoWars as well as her openly wishing violence upon immigrants.

On the intellectual side, Adrian Vermuele argues in The Atlantic that conservative legal theory ought not to focus on originalism, but instead read morality into the law along with respect for authority and the importance of social hierarchies since “…the central aim of the constitutional order is to promote good rule, not to ‘protect liberty’ as an end in itself.” This has long been a strain in conservative thought, but usually, at least in countries like the U.S. and U.K., conservative defense of institutions has often included individual rights and the market.

The Economist notes that what’s remarkable about Trump’s insurgent brand of “conservatism” is a complete trashing of institutions across the spectrum. The message has been to “beat” the Left at any cost, regardless of Trump’s flagrant disinterest of freedom or morality. I’m not here to say Adrian Vermuele is the future of conservatism, but rather that if the intellectual Right is abandoning individual liberty and limited government under Trump, there are people with actual bad ideas waiting to fill the vacuum. Rejecting Trump is a way to avoid going down that path.

And the stakes are high. The political Left, as I mentioned earlier, is undergoing some disturbing trends. Robert Tracinski writes in The Bulwark that if we take the threat of the Left seriously, this election may be the Anti-Flight 93 Election; it’s the last chance to kick out Trump and get the political Right’s house in order before the leftists come knocking. Now is the time to do this when the cost is relatively low with “sleepy” Joe Biden. We need the alternative to socialism to be a vibrant communicator who can articulate the importance of the rule of law and the free enterprise system; if we are stuck with a self-absorbed authoritarian strongman with no ideology or understanding of economics, the socialists will be ascendant. And moreover, a loss for Biden would be a signal to the radical Left that appeals to the middle are dead; a convincing Biden victory is a way for more moderate parts of the Democratic party to muscle out the Bernie bros.

Finally, I’m not alone in this thought. Conservative columnist George Will, former National Review writer David French, and former editor at National Review Jonah Goldberg are all prominent right wing thinkers who oppose Trump despite being staunchly opposed to the Left. I doubt they’ll vote for Biden, but they definitely won’t be voting for the president. The only path forward for a strong American Right is to reject Donald Trump.

Photo: White House, public domain image.

Observations on Impeachment

Impeachment is a highly political process. I want to walk through the impeachment process and trial and try to articulate my own thinking.

The Transcript

Let’s start with the phone call on July 26th. Trump released a transcript of himself asking the head of state of another country to investigate a conspiracy theory that Ukraine has a copy of a server of Hilary Clinton’s emails. The intelligence community believes this is Russian propaganda and National Security Council official Fiona Hill testified to this under oath. Trump also brought up a political rival during an official call with the head of state of another country, and asked President Zelensky to investigate them.

There’s a lot to discuss here. Apart from the intelligence community’s views of the Ukrainian server conspiracy theory, I think it reflects poorly on Trump’s…mental state? priorities? that he is still trying to investigate theories around Hillary Clinton’s emails four years after his own election, which he won! It doesn’t seem like he is prioritizing implementation of American policy, but rather stuck in the irrelevant past.

Also of note, Trump brings up Viktor Shokin, who, as far as I can tell was widely believed to be corrupt, yet Trump seems to think his dismissal was unfair. There’s also the discussion of Hunter Biden, Joe Biden’s son. Hunter seems to be a screw up and a bad human being. Yet, as Senator Romney pointed out, there was no evidence that the Bidens’ actions were criminal although certainly morally questionable. In particular, Joe Biden had a conflict of interest, but I don’t think anyone can argue Viktor Shokin should have remained in office…except Trump.

Moreover, it doesn’t seem to be a matter of national security or indeed foreign policy that Joe Biden be investigated by the Ukrainian government even if he were directly implicated in a crime. Instead, I would expect the FBI would just investigate him for wrongdoing. That seems much more effective if you wanted to get to the bottom of it. Moreover, looking at the testimony presented by Trump’s defense, it doesn’t seem like a crime was committed.

Yes, when making a public announcement about Ukrainian prosecutors, the Vice President should acknowledge all conflicts of interest. He didn’t, and that seems bad. While it isn’t a violation of a particular law (the respective law would have to be pretty specific), it reflects pretty poorly. In fact, there are many parallels to Trump’s actions. I’d go so far as to say that it’s inconsistent for one to believe that Joe Biden’s actions are wrong while saying Trump’s are not. They are almost identical.

Both are accused of undertaking policy decisions that they claim are in the national interest while appearing to have personal conflicts. The differences are that (1) Trump is currently in office, while Biden is not, and (2) the House of Representatives seems like the correct place to investigate whether Trump had a conflict of interest, while the Ukrainian government absolutely should not be in charge of investigating Biden. And it definitely shouldn’t be incentivized with U.S. taxpayer funded military aid; it should be done by a law enforcement agency. Finally, I would be remiss not to mention that Trump has an even closer parallel with the Hunter Biden situation: his own children, in particular his son-in-law who was given a prominent position in the west wing. If Hunter Biden’s actions in Ukraine are worth using the office of presidency in such a way, what are we to make of Trump’s own nepotism?

Returning to the call, the Trump defense team pointed out that no quid pro quo was mentioned in this phone call. This is true, and also seems irrelevant. The use of the office of the president to encourage foreign governments to investigate political rivals and conspiracy theories is most certainly an abuse of office, regardless of whether a quid pro quo occurred. Whether this is grounds for removal from office we can address later.

Witnesses and Evidence

More circumstantial evidence for this being a political abuse of office include testimony from several witnesses. Most interesting is from Gordon Sondland who stated that a quid pro quo did exist offering the President of Ukraine a White House visit in exchange for an announcement of investigations into the Bidens. He also stated that John Bolton, Mike Pompeo, and Mike Pence were all aware.

Although not a witness, Mick Mulvaney gave a press conference confirming that military aid authorized by Congress was held up in order to get Ukraine to investigate the DNC server.

Also of note is that the White House released the aid to Ukraine on September 11, only days after Congress announces an inquiry into Rudy Giuliani’s involvement in Ukraine and possible interference with US policy. No one has made any attempt to explain what particular evidence of the Ukrainian government fighting corruption came to light on that day which made the White House approve the aid.

Finally, the House asked (not subpoenaed) John Bolton to testify which could have turned the circumstantial evidence into specific testimony against Trump, at least according to the testimony of Gordon Sondland. The Trump administration blocked those witnesses from testifying, citing executive privilege. The Constitution gives the House the sole power of impeachment, not the executive the power to overrule their investigation. The House could definitely have taken this to the courts with an official subpoena, but they decided not to, I suspect because they felt that impeachment was somewhat politically toxic given the President’s support in the Senate. That’s a political calculation. I think the political case against Trump would have been stronger if both the House and the courts sided against the President. They decided not to the and I think the case against Trump for obstruction was weaker because of this procedural choice. Nonetheless, I can’t see any legal argument that would side with the President; if so, the House’s impeachment power is useless. Therefore, the obstruction of Congress charge certainly seems appropriate.

However, I need to take the Democrats down a peg; the stated reason for not taking the subpoena to court was that Trump presented an immediate threat to our democracy because of his election interference attempts. Democratic impeachment managers argued Russia had interfered in the 2016 election and Trump had encouraged this. I find this completely unconvincing. Russia favored a Trump victory over Hilary Clinton, and I’m sure they spent a bunch of money trying to achieve this, but I have never bought into the narrative that Russia can control the outcome of U.S. elections through Facebook ads. It’s ludicrous. Democracy is powerful because it utilizes disparate information from voters; if you think voters have to be shielded from information, even misinformation, then you don’t believe democracy is a force for good in the world. You instead prefer some sort of government where gatekeepers determine what information voters receive and then voters are allowed to vote with that limited information.

Trump’s attempts to use the Ukrainian government to help him win reelection seem to be an abuse of office. But I don’t think he is a threat to a fair election. The biggest threat to a fair election is our entire electoral system.

Senate Trial

Trump maintained that the impeachment inquiry was a “witch hunt” and a “hoax”. Under this view, it’s not surprising that he opposed John Bolton testifying at his Senate trial. Of course, the President’s claims do not address the significant (although circumstantial) evidence gathered against him. Moreover, Bolton supposedly implicates Trump in his new book. The only real explanations for the President’s behavior is either that there was a vast conspiracy, including many witnesses, his own handpicked ambassador to the EU and massive donor Gordon Sondlond, his own handpicked National Security Adviser John Bolton, his own handpicked Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, and presumably his own Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (although he wasn’t asked to testify). Or, Trump is guilty of doing some pretty shady stuff that he doesn’t want people to testify to. The President maintained that it is the first scenario. This seems to be quite unlikely given the circumstantial evidence.

But there’s an easy way to check, just have the Senate ask Bolton to testify. Senate Republicans declined to do this. I have a hard time explaining this in a good faith way. Some maintained that the evidence presented by the prosecution was inadequate. Unless Gordon Sondlond and Mick Mulvaney just spontaneously made up the same story despite being integral parts of the Trump’s administration, this seems hard to believe. John Bolton is a well-respected lifelong Republican, serving in the Bush and Trump White Houses. He is a strong opponent of the Obama backed nuclear deal with Iran, a defining Republican foreign policy position in the last election. Any attempt to say Bolton is a left-wing sympathizer is bizarre, and yet virtually no Republicans voted to hear his testimony.

I believe what is actually happening is that there is significant political pressure from Republican voters to end the impeachment process. Even if a Republican Senator believed Trump to be guilty, to stay in office, they must survive a primary challenge from a pro-Trump challenger, which would surely win in a Republican primary against someone who voted against Trump in impeachment. One could easily argue that the Senators are doing the democratic thing by following their voters’ interests, but it would not mean that Trump was innocent of these charges. It would simply shift blame from the Senators to our current democratic system, which is apparently unable to deal with a president who abuses the powers of his office.

Other senators, like Lamar Alexander of Tennessee stated that the prosecution made a compelling case of misbehavior, but that it doesn’t rise to the level of impeachment. We will get to this defense in a minute.

Non Defense Arguments

It’s worth taking a minute to discuss some points I have heard often, but are not actual defenses of President Trump. The first is the critique of hypocrisy, which is pretty common in these partisan times. Hypocrisy is an excellent way to impugn the motives of your political opponents, but it doesn’t address the object-level arguments. The way I’ve heard this phrased is that presidents have been expanding executive authority for decades, and now Democrats are only calling out Trump’s abuses of power because they don’t like his tribal affiliation, which is more than the usual Right-Left divide. In other words, Trump is a jerk to his political enemies and that’s the reason the House impeached him. Reason Editor Nick Gillespie has espoused something like this view, and tied it in with a libertarian point which is that Democrats don’t actually care about executive authority, they just don’t like Trump. This is a double standard other presidents have not been held to.

Closely tied with this critique is that House Democrats have wanted to impeach Trump from the beginning and were just waiting for a chance they could exploit. Note, neither of these related points address whether Trump actually abused his office. I think it’s absolutely true that Democrats have wanted to impeach Trump, but that doesn’t have any bearing on whether or not he did bad enough acts that he should be removed from office. This argument would be equivalent to Al Copone’s lawyers arguing that the prosecution had been wanting to catch him for a long time and so it’s irrelevant that he broke the law. This is not an argument. The only thing that matters is what Trump did, and the evidence isn’t good.

Returning to the abuse of executive power, I fail to see how continued abuse and concentration of executive authority over time means we should continue allowing abuse of authority. This view basically says that if one government official gets away with abuse, then we have no standing to ever challenge their successors abuses again. This makes no sense to me.

I’ve written pretty extensively about the problem with increased executive authority that’s accrued to the president. A thousand wrongs don’t make the next wrong a right. Instead, trying to restore some of the rule of law one piece at a time sounds like a good idea. And we should be using this opportunity to recruit more who didn’t use to care about executive authority into the tent.

Allowing unchecked executive power to own the libs is a dumb strategy.

Finally, there’s a lot of talk about the whistleblower who wrote a letter that helped to start this investigation. According to Republicans, this whistleblower was a partisan who didn’t like Trump. I have to admit, I have no idea how this argument is supposed to work or how it could possibly be relevant, but it seems so common, I have to include it. However the House finds out about presidential abuse, they have the sole authority of impeachment, meaning they can call witnesses and investigate wrongdoing. They’ve done so, and the witnesses have implicated Trump in abusing his office. The whistleblower’s testimony isn’t necessary. Why Rand Paul keeps talking about the whistleblower seems to just be a distraction from the evidence of Trumps wrongdoing.

Defenses

To summarize, apparently Trump sent his personal lawyer to Ukraine with intention to dig up dirt on his political opponent and even met with Ukrainian officials to achieve this end. Trump then used his office and capacity as president to directly bring up his political goals with the Ukrainian president on an official call. Witnesses and Mick Mulvaney say that military aid and a White House visit were conditioned on investigations into a discredited conspiracy theory about the DNC servers (which are not a matter of national security) and also an investigation of his political rival’s son from several years ago (also doesn’t seem to be a matter of massive national security importance).

This seems pretty bad.

I have a low tolerance of abuse of power. I think Obama was horrendous in his abuse of the office of the presidency including when the IRS targeted conservative groups, and when the administration targeted journalists with the Espionage Act. I think these could pretty easily be classified as impeachable. In that light, I don’t see how the evidence against Trump is much different.

We’ve already covered how the disinterest in the Senate on hearing from John Bolton is pretty suspect. But let’s talk about the actual defenses given by the president’s legal team. There are quite a few.

Some seem pretty specific and weak; Ukrainian President Zelensky said he was not pressured to investigate the Bidens or Crowdstrike. Of course, if your entire presidency is based on opposing Russia and you need U.S. help to maintain that stance, and the Senate is entirely controlled by Republicans, why would you risk antagonizing Trump who viciously attacks his own officials if they ever cross him (see Jeff Sessions, Gordon Sondlond was fired). If Trump was removed, it’s certain that Zelensky could quickly make friends with any future Democratic president regardless of his current positions, and so it makes sense that he would offer to support Trump publicly. This public position seems to count for little compared to actual testimony of American witnesses under oath.

More interesting I think was the argument that there could be no impeachment without a statutory crime. This could be promising, but as Ilya Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy points out, holding up Congressionally approved funds is a violation of federal law. Moreover, if you had to pass a law specifying every possible way that the president should be constrained then we would have no limits on the presidency.

Returning now to Senator Lamar Alexander, who argued against subpoenaing John Bolton by saying the President acted inappropriately but his actions didn’t rise to the level of impeachment. Supposing what the President did was not impeachable, why would this preclude getting more information from a witness? Senator Alexander didn’t know the extent of Trump’s actions prior to the House investigation and the testimony of witnesses. He says Trump’s actions were inappropriate, then it would seem judicious to get additional information to make sure no further wrongdoing had occurred. The Senator’s position is completely incoherent. Moreover, his beliefs about the world don’t explain what we see happening: Gordon Sondland was fired from his position as ambassador to the EU. If Alexander is correct and Trump did some things wrong but nothing impeachable, why was Sondland fired?

Trump maintains everything was a vast conspiracy. I’ve noted before, this is bizarre and would mean that everyone Trump happens to hand-select for prominent positions in his administration turned on him with the exact same beliefs about how his administration operates, supported by tons of circumstantial evidence, including Trump’s own phone calls. However, if you wanted to maintain such a narrative, you’d fire everyone who was in on this conspiracy, including Gordon Sondland, who testified to the existence of a quid pro. Of course, you might also act this way if you were actually guilty of abusing your office. Perhaps only John Bolton could have told us the difference. One thing that does not explain this evidence is Senator Alexander’s position: “Trump did things but they weren’t that bad”. If so, why purge the administration? If the actions revealed by Sondland weren’t a big deal (and honestly I kind of thought Sondland thought this) then what did he do wrong from Trump’s perspective? I don’t think Senator Alexander can explain this, and thus I think his position makes little internal sense.

Moreover, I think he’s wrong on the object level as well. The actions undertaken by Trump are serious. He held up Congressionally authorized aid for personal political reasons. Separation of powers is a vital part of our limited government. If the executive can simply kidnap funds authorized by Congress, then we have no limits on government power. We are no longer a limited Republic where the rights of individuals and the minority are defended against an overzealous majority. Instead we are simply electing a despot every four years who will terrorize his political enemies. If what Trump did was an acceptable use of the office of the president, can the president just deny funding for things until people do his political bidding? Could Obama have denied highway funding to red states until they agreed to drop lawsuits against Obamacare? Could he have held up funds until Congress authorized his strikes in Libya? If Trump could do the same for Ukrainian aid, I’m not sure what the difference is, or how any of this could be called limited government or separation of powers.

Finally, there is the argument that this matter should be left to the voters. It is, by definition, a very democratic argument. Clearly, of course, such an argument could not always make intuitive sense; if a president decided that he had the power to cancel elections and declare himself permanent dictator, then the voters can no longer give any input. This is the tact the Democratic impeachment managers took. I’ve already stated my skepticism about it.

However, we do not have to go there; the Constitution doesn’t indicate that impeachment can only be used if the president endangers elections. Instead it states that he can be impeached for treason and other high crimes and misdemeanors. It is clear that Congress can remove a president who misbehaves, not just about election endangerment. And this makes sense; the separation of powers in our Constitution means that both the president and Congress can claim separate democratic mandates, even conflicting ones. The president isn’t elected dictator for four years, but given limited powers and told to work in conjunction with Congress to exercise authority. If the president misuses that power, it’s clear Congress has the authority to remove him, even in an election year. To believe otherwise is to believe that there are no limits on presidential authority.

Conclusion

It seems clear to me that congressional Republicans are backing Trump due to political expediency rather than the facts as they appear. Yes, it’s true, we don’t have much in the way of direct testimony of what Trump knew and when. But we have ample circumstantial evidence to warrant taking a closer look. Republicans failed to do so, declining to hear from literal Republican heroes like John Bolton and Mick Mulvaney. I understand the reality of their politics but I don’t understand why Republican voters aren’t concerned about the massive power abuses going on in the White House and what that could mean when the other party gets into power. I’ve searched hard for another explanation for the current state of affairs, even looking at Trump’s own defense team, and I found them entirely unconvincing.