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Trump has vowed to shake some of democracy’s pillars

 


 (AP) — American presidential elections are a moment when the nation holds up a mirror to look at itself. They are a reflection of values and dreams, of grievances and scores to be settled.

The results say much about a country’s character, future, and core beliefs. On Tuesday, America looked into that mirror and more voters saw former president Donald Trump, delivering him a far-reaching victory in the most contested states.

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Donald Trump has promised sweeping action in a second administration. But his proposals are more complicated than that sounds and often lack specifics.

He won for many reasons. One of them was that a formidable number of Americans, from different angles, said the state of democracy was a prime concern.

The candidate they chose had campaigned through a lens of darkness, calling the country “garbage” and his opponent “stupid,” a “communist” and “the b-word.”

The mirror reflected not only a restive nation’s discontent but childless cat ladies, false stories of pets devoured by Haitian immigrant neighbors, a sustained emphasis on calling things “weird,” and a sudden bout of Democratic “joy” now crushed. The campaign will be remembered both for profound developments, like the two assassination attempts on Trump, and his curious chatter about golfer Arnold Palmer’s genitalia.

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Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump is moved from the stage at a campaign rally, Saturday, July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pa. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Even as Trump prevailed, most voters said they were very or somewhat concerned that electing Trump would bring the U.S. closer to being an authoritarian country, where a single leader has unchecked power, according to the AP VoteCast survey. Still, 1 in 10 of those voters backed him anyway. Nearly 4 in 10 Trump voters said they wanted complete upheaval in how the country is run.

In Trump’s telling, the economy was in shambles, even when almost every measure said otherwise, and the border was an open sore leeching murderous migrants, when the actual number of crossings had dropped precipitously. All this came wrapped in his signature language of catastrophism.

His win, only the second time in U.S. history that a candidate won the presidency in non-consecutive terms, demonstrated Trump’s keen ear for what stirs emotions, especially the sense of millions of voters of being left out — whether because someone else cheated or got special treatment or otherwise fell to the ravages of the enemy within.

That’s whom Americans decisively chose.

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Bikers show their support for President-elect Donald Trump while riding on I-84, Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, near Lords Valley, Pa. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

The centuries-old democracy delivered power to the presidential candidate who gave voters fair warning he might take core elements of that democracy apart.

After already having tried to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power when he lost to President Joe Biden in 2020, Trump mused that he would be justified if he decided to pursue “the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution.”

This, in contrast to the oath of office he took, and will again, to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution” as best he can.

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President-elect Donald Trump steps out to the portico to be sworn in as the 45th president of the United States during the 58th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Jan. 20, 2017. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, file)

One rough and decidedly imperfect measure of whether Trump might mean what he says is how many times he says it. His direct threat to try to end or suspend the Constitution was largely a one-off.



But the 2024 campaign was thick with his vows, rally after rally, interview after interview, that if realized would upend democracy’s basic practices, protections, and institutions as Americans have known them.

And now, he says after his win, “I will govern by a simple motto: promises made, promises kept.”

Throughout the campaign, to lusty cheers, Trump promised to use presidential power over the justice system to go after his personal political adversaries. He then raised the stakes further by threatening to enlist military force against such domestic foes — “the enemy from within.”

Doing so would shatter any semblance of Justice Department independence and turn soldiers against citizens in ways not seen in modern times.

He’s promised to track down and deport immigrants in massive numbers, raising the prospect of using military or military-style assets for that as well.

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A member of the Texas delegation holds a sign during the Republican National Convention July 17, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

Spurred by his fury and denialism over his 2020 defeat, Trump’s supporters in some state governments have already engineered changes in how votes are cast, counted, and affirmed, an effort centered on the false notion that the last election was rigged against him.

On Tuesday, Trump won an election in the time of a Democratic administration. The effort to revise election procedures will now be fought out by states in his time.

Yet another pillar of the system is also in his sights — the non-political civil service and its political masters, whom Trump together calls the deep state.

He means the generals who didn’t always heed him last time, but this time shall.

He means the Justice Department people who refused to indulge his desperate effort to cook upvotes he didn’t get in 2020. He means the bureaucrats who dragged their heels on parts of his first-term agenda and whom Trump now wants to be purged.

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President Donald Trump with, from left, Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Mark Milley, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford and Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller, speaks during a briefing with senior military leaders in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Trump wants to make it easier to fire federal workers by classifying thousands of them as being outside civil service protections. That could weaken the government’s power to enforce statutes and rules by draining parts of the workforce and permitting his administration to staff offices with more malleable employees than last time.

But if some or all of these tenets of modern democracy are to fall, it will be through the most democratic of means. Voters chose him — and by extension, this — not Democrat Kamala Harris, the vice president.

And by early measures, it was a clean election, just like 2020.

Eric Dezenhall is a scandal-management expert who has followed Trump’s business and political career and correctly predicted his wins in 2016 and now. He also foresaw that the criminal cases against Trump would help, not hurt, him.

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Former President Donald Trump appears in Manhattan Criminal Court, May 30, 2024, in New York. Jury deliberations in Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial entered a second day as jurors navigated the weighty task of evaluating the former president’s guilt and innocence alongside the facts of the case. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, Pool)

Sussing out what Trump truly intends to do and what might be bluster is not always easy, he said. “There are certain things that he says because they cross his brain at a certain moment,” Dezenhall said. “I don’t put stock in that. I put stock in themes, and there is a theme of vengeance.”

So it remains to be seen whether America will get two special days Trump has promised.

Upon taking office again, he said, he’ll be a “dictator,” but only for a day. And he’s promised to let police stage “one really violent day” to crack down on crime with impunity, a remark his campaign said he didn’t really mean, just as his people said he wasn’t serious about subverting the U.S. Constitution.

The voters also gave Trump’s Republicans clear control of the Senate, and therefore majority say in whether to confirm the loyalists Trump will nominate for top jobs in government. Trump controls his party in ways he didn’t in his first term when major figures in his administration repeatedly frustrated his most outlier ambitions.

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The U.S. Capitol, is seen at night in Washington, Nov. 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

“The fact that a once proud people chose, twice, to demean itself with a leader like Donald Trump will be one of history’s great cautionary tales,” said Cal Jillson, a constitutional and presidential scholar at Southern Methodist University whose new book, “Race, Ethnicity, and American Decline,” anticipated some of the existential issues of the election.

“Donald Trump’s actions will be as divisive, ill-considered, and mean-spirited in his second term as in his first,” he said. “He will undercut Ukraine, NATO, and the U.N. abroad and the rule of law, individual rights, and our senses of national cohesion and purpose at home.”

From the political left, any threats to democracy were not on the mind of independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont when he offered a blistering critique of the Democratic campaign.

“It should come as no surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working people would find that the working class has abandoned them,” he said in a statement. “Will they understand the pain and political alienation that tens of millions of Americans are experiencing?”

He concluded: “Probably not.”

For his part, Trump says he is intent on restoring democracy, not tearing it down.

There was nothing democratic, he and his allies assert, in seeing military leaders defy the elected commander in chief, whether the issue was troop deployments or his wish for a splashy military parade. Or in seeing Democratic presidents establish immigration policy and vast student loan relief through executive action, bypassing Congress.

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Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump riot at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

But that case is built from the ground up on the lie of a stolen 2020 election, his machinations to stall the certification of that vote, and his mob’s bloody attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He comes to office intending to pardon some of the people convicted for that riot and perhaps clear himself of criminal cases against him.

Guardrails remain. One is the Supreme Court, whose conservative majority loosened the leash on presidential behavior in its ruling expanding their immunity from prosecution. The court has not been fully tested on how far it will go to accommodate Trump’s actions and agenda. And which party will control the House is not yet known.

The Republican’s victory came from a public so put off by America’s trajectory that it welcomed his brash and disruptive approach.

Among voters under 30, just under half went for Trump, an improvement from his 2020 performance, according to the AP VoteCast survey of more than 120,000 voters. About three-quarters of young voters said the country was headed in the wrong direction, and roughly one-third said they wanted total upheaval in how the country is run.

By Trump’s words, at least, that’s what they’ll get.

Elon Musk has arrived. Shares of his electric car-maker Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab added roughly $100 billion in value when markets opened Wednesday following Donald Trump’s presidential election victory. Musk backed the Republican to the hilt, and his vast web of business interests overlap – worryingly – with his new political role. The converse risk is that this puts him in the firing line of not only the trade war, but unpredictable leaders’ whims.
Musk’s sprawling empire empowered him with two pieces of ammunition that have rapidly put him as a key person in Trump’s corner. With a net worth of more than $280 billion, according, opens new tab to Forbes, he enriched Trump’s campaign with donations. He also has a pulpit: After the acquisition of $44 billion social network Twitter, now X, in 2022, he reinstated Trump's account, rolled back moderation policies that shifted the site's political mood, and broadcast unceasing support to his own followers. In return, Trump – who once boasted, opens new tab that he could have forced the tech entrepreneur to “drop to (his) knees and beg” – said that he may appoint Musk to oversee a committee on government efficiency.
The Tesla boss is already deeply intertwined with the state. SpaceX, the $210 billion satellite company he controls, is building an espionage network for U.S. intelligence, Reuters reported. Governments on both sides of the Atlantic depend on it for reaching orbit, and its Starlink system is crucial in Ukraine. Tesla, meanwhile, benefits from government subsidies while also facing a bevy of investigations into safety and labor practices. Add in that the company is trying to roll out fully automated self-driving features that are subject to deep regulatory scrutiny, and Musk’s cozy relationship to the next U.S. leader smacks of concerning conflicts of interest.
A chart listing key contract awards, investigatory probes and regulatory efforts targeting Elon Musk's companies
A chart listing key contract awards, investigatory probes and regulatory efforts targeting Elon Musk's companies
There is, however, a converse risk. The north star of Trump’s political program is economic nationalism. He has promised across-the-board 10% tariff hikes on imports, rising to 60% on Chinese goods. Turbo-charging the trade war cuts against Tesla’s enduring advantage: a uniquely free rein to operate in the People’s Republic, home to 40% of its manufacturing capacity. Over a fifth of 2023 revenue, opens new tab came from the country.
Musk has enjoyed a relatively close relationship with Chinese officials, making a surprise visit to Premier Li Qiang in April. Regulators have ways to pressure or help him, like with restrictions on self-driving features. The benefit of potentially becoming a proxy for the White House is that Musk is now a conduit between China’s leaders and those in the United States, earning him the continued ear of both. But perhaps the greater risk is that he becomes a bargaining chip between the two. After all, the governments on which he relies are in direct and growing conflict. And those who depended on Trump have been disappointed before, judging by the near-endless list of former confidants booted from his prior administration. Ultimately, Musk’s vulnerability to the whims of either side is rising. Given enough time, that will haunt him.
Follow @JMAGuilford, opens new tab on X
(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)
CONTEXT NEWS
Shares of Tesla opened up over 13% at the beginning of trading on Nov. 6, increasing the electric-car maker’s market capitalization by over $100 billion. The move comes after Republican Donald Trump was declared the victor of the U.S. presidential election, held the day prior.
Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk endorsed Trump, contributing millions to a political action committee and organizing get-out-the-vote operations. Trump has said that he would set up a commission on government efficiency to be headed by Musk.

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