Last Exit From Autocracy

America survived one Trump term. It wouldn’t survive a second.

David Frum
The Atlantic

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A road that leads off a cliff. A stop sign is right at the edge of the cliff, and the sky is gray and cloudy.
Photo rendering: Patrick White

The most important ballot question in 2020 is not Joe Biden versus Donald Trump, or Democrat versus Republican. The most important question is: Will Trump get away with his corruption — will his crooked and authoritarian tactics succeed?

If the answer is yes, be ready for more. Much more.

Americans have lavished enormous powers on the presidency. They have also sought to bind those powers by law. Yet the Founders of the republic understood that law alone could never eliminate the risks inherent in the power of the presidency. They worried ceaselessly about the prospect of a truly bad man in the office — a Caesar or a Cromwell, as Alexander Hamilton fretted in “Federalist №21.” They built restraints: a complicated system for choosing the president, a Congress to constrain him, impeachment to remove him. Their solutions worked for two and a half centuries. In our time, the system failed.

Through the Trump years, institutions have failed again and again to check corruption, abuse of power, and even pro-Trump violence.

As Trump took office, I published a cover story in this magazine, arguing that his presidency could put the United States on the road to autocracy. “By all early indications,” I wrote…

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David Frum
The Atlantic

Senior Editor, The Atlantic. Author, “Trumpocracy: The Corruption of the American Republic” (Jan. 2018)