I know I've been a bit
scarce here of late and I could give any one of several reasons why I've barely
blogged this year, but I find nothing more exhausting than a blogpost promising
to do better. (Usually they're the last
blogpost of a dead blog, anyway.) I'd
rather just do better. So onward and upward.
I, like all reasonable,
intelligent human beings, was intensely worried, perhaps even panicked after the
sociopathic man-child who was "elected" president took office earlier
this year. From the day after the election until fairly recently I was wringing my hands in worry about all the damage
someone like Trump could do while occupying the most powerful office in the world. Now, though?
Not so much.
I'm not feeling better
because I expect Trump will be impeached or otherwise removed from office. In terms of simple math impeachment is an
almost statistical impossibility. For
reasons I hesistate to attribute to loyalty, (but perhaps I can at least offer
that complimentary term to the insane side of the aisle) Republicans don't eat
their own. Trump's been buffeted by
scandal and sitting in the mid-thirties in terms of his approval rating almost
since he took office. If the Republican
congress hasn't turned on him by now, what would it take? Would he have to devour a live infant on
camera? He's done just about everything
but, including talking about grabbing women by the pussy. No, Trump will be safe from impeachment as
long as the R's are in charge.
And even if (because it's
far from a guarantee) the House of Representatives flips to the Democrats in
2018, and even if they then impeach him (also far from a guarantee) the Senate
even as ideally constituted for the purpose will still have enough Republicans to block
removing Trump from office. So
impeachment, should it ever occur (which it probably won't) will have about the
same practical effect as it did on Clinton: making the other side look petty
for doing it.
Other forms of removal
from office, barring unexpected death (I mean, the man is 70) are even more
outlandish. Plus, and I didn't even want
to get into this, but even chopping the head off the snake won't make much
difference. The difference between a Trump
presidency and a Pence presidency will be one of temperament, not ideology.
So I don't expect Trump to leave office before 2020. I certainly hope he does then. Why, then, am I feeling cautiously
optimistic? Because the man is fucking
worthless.
I mean, maybe I should have already expected this, but
somehow I had convinced myself that Trump would come into office and actually
enact all the crazy shit he promised on the campaign trail. I halfway believed he would actually surround
himself with brilliant advisors who would do all the heavy lifting, and the
country would tilt rightward into a fucking ditch.
But Trump never surrounded himself with brilliant
advisors and at this point, most know to steer well clear. Instead, he's surrounded by
his daughter, son-in-law, and some low-rent Goebbels wannabe. And they're all at each other's throats. By all accounts no one working in The White
House knows who's in charge. Trump himself
is apparently always convinced of the rectitude of the last article someone
shoved under his nose. The whole thing
sounds like a page out of the Kremlin court squabbles of the Soviet Union.
A preternatural gift for demagoguery has translated into
precisely jack and shit when attempting to govern.
(I say "govern" to be kind, because it's obvious that Trump
would much rather dictate, and seems frustrated by the very idea that his
pronouncements are not actually instantly obeyed as law.) I mean think about this: Trump couldn't get
Obamacare repeal passed with a Republican House and Senate. That's like McDonald's running out of
beef. I don't even know what to make of
that. But this buffoon cannot get the one thing that has united Republicans of all stripes for the
past decade passed?
Legislation is a difficult, grueling process of
compromise and discussion. And Trump is
absolute shit at it. He nearly ruined
the budget reconciliation by demanding his stupid wall, which both sides
considered idiotic to even be discussing at that point in time. Imagine that. Republicans and Democrats in the congress,
normally at each other's throats, are suddenly united in how stupid they
consider The White House's demands.
As for the scandals, well, Trump will weather them. I'm not convinced anything can disgrace him
anymore. He's incapable of shame and his
followers have erected a nigh impenetrable cult of personality around their own five senses (six, if you count "common.") Trump is right and therefore right is Trump in
their eyes, so it doesn't really matter what he does, he's always right. The scandals won't bring him down. What they will do, though, is keep him
distracted. While all his fury is
focused on James Comey and the news media being mean to him (poor guy) he's not
concentrating on enacting his stupid campaign promises.
The scandals also keep him boxed in. Legislators who don't have the advantage of
being as Teflon as Don himself are already giving him a wide berth. Even Fox News seems to be tentatively stepping
away from their constant beatification of him.
It's easy to pretend it's still sunny when you feel a lone raindrop, but
it's harder to dismiss a storm. As long
as the crap keeps piling up, people with a survival isntinct (read: politicians and pundits) will continue to distance themselves from Trump.
And what this all adds up to is that Trump is so
incompetent he can't ruin the country. In
November I was worried about him establishing a fascist dictatorship, but now
I'm not convinced he could cut the ribbon to a strip mall without breaking the scissors. I think, in the end, Trump will run
out his four years as essentially a lame duck.
He's what the press used to call "embattled" when they meant a
politician was all out of friends and couldn't get anything done any more. And he's already embattled six months into
his presidency.
Sure, things will be fucked up. There's already another right-winger on the Supreme
Court. He could fumble a war or a
terrorist attack. But mostly I expect a
whole lot of nothing happening. And when
the alternative to nothing is rabid right-wing policies, I'll take it.
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