Column: We’re stuck with an unchecked mad king until January
Amid all the alarming and unhinged comments of the president of the United States in recent days threatening Iran with genocide โ remarks beyond even the usual cray-cray blather from Donald Trump โ it was a statement from his spokesperson on Tuesday that really put the madness in the White House in perspective.
โOnly the President knows where things stand and what he will do,โ Karoline Leavitt said.
She issued those words just hours before Trumpโs 8 p.m. Tuesday deadline for Iran to either reopen the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping or face Armageddon โ that is, war crimes by the United States. The statement from the White House press secretary was as clear a description as Americans could get of governance under Trump these days: A mad king reigns, virtually unchecked.
And as a practical matter, there is nothing under the Constitution, neither impeachment nor removal under the 25th Amendment, that can be done about him. Thereโs only votersโ opportunity to eject the complicit Republican majorities in the House and Senate in Novemberโs midterm elections, to install a Democratic โ and democratic โ check on Trump for the remaining two years of his term.
By now we know that, just before Trumpโs deadline to Iran warning โa whole civilization will die tonight,โ he announced a fragile two-week ceasefire for negotiations. The commander in chief declared victory, natch. But so did Iran. And it had the better of the argument: Iran continued to control and monetize passage through the strait, unlike before Trumpโs war began Feb. 28, and already on Wednesday it flexed that power by closing the route in retaliation for Israeli strikes. The ceasefire also lets Iran retain possession of its enriched, nearly bomb-grade uranium, and the nation won Trumpโs offer of possible tariff and sanctions relief.
So much for the โUNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!โ he demanded in a post a month ago.
Iโm writing these words on Wednesday. Who knows where things will stand by the time youโre reading this? โOnly the president knows.โ
Trump has fluctuated, reversed and contradicted himself repeatedly โ even within a single social-media screed or chest-thumping performance for the press โ since he ordered war against Iran nearly six weeks ago, without notice to Congress, let alone its authorization. Since Sunday, heโs variously called Iranโs leaders โcrazy bastardsโ and โanimalsโ and taken credit for โTotal Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail.โ
Presidential rule by fiat and whim would be wrong in any case under the Constitutionโs checks and balances of power, and specifically of war power. But in Trumpโs case, America has a president who lately has piled on the evidence that he is mentally unstable, unfit for the office.
And spare us the cheerleadersโ claims on Fox News about how heโs playing multidimensional chess. When even Alex Jones likens Trump to โcrazy King Learโ and calls for invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from power โ echoing former Trump promoters including Marjorie Taylor Greene and Candace Owens, among others โ you know heโs crossed a line by his unilateral war-making and profane threats (on Easter Sunday!) of genocidal apocalypse.
The evidence of Trumpโs dangerous instability has been there from his political genesis. In his first term, he warned heโd unleash โfire and fury like the world has never seenโ against nuclear-armed North Korea then declared that he โfell in loveโ with dictator Kim Jong-un (without achieving any diminution in Kimโs arsenal). He celebrates the deaths of political enemies and prosecutes those still living. He repeatedly interrupts himself on some policy question to bloviate about his ballroom plans.
Heโs ordered armed agents into American neighborhoods on immigration raids, then expressed neither responsibility nor remorse when citizens died and legal residents got deported. The national security leaders of his first term let it be known that theyโd prevented him from acting on his worst impulses, but thereโs no chance of that from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Retired Gen. Mark Milley, former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in 2021 described first-term Trump as being in mental decline and โfascist to the core.โ
Youโd be hard-pressed to find anyone who thinks Trump has gotten better in the intervening five years.
The country โcanโt be a therapy session for โฆ a troubled man like this,โ Trumpโs first-term attorney general, William P. Barr, told CBS in 2023 as Trump campaigned to return to office.
If only the presidency were therapy for Trump. Instead heโs like a power addict in the worldโs most powerful job, mainlining its intoxicants, and no one will stop him. Only people with extraordinary egos seek the White House in the first place, but when an actual egomaniac inhabits that warping bubble of butter-uppers, thereโs danger. I remain haunted by the words of retired Gen. John F. Kelly, Trumpโs first-term Homeland Security secretary and then White House chief of staff, who in 2023 said of Trumpโs potential reelection: โGod help us.โ
Having failed twice to convict and remove Trump in his first term, Democrats have shied from a third attempt, until now. Scores in Congress have called for impeachment or invocation of the 25th Amendment to oust him. Thereโs some value in sending a message. But Democrats are offering supporters false hope. A Republican-led Congress and a Cabinet of clownish sycophants will not exercise the powers they have, even against a mad king.
The authors of the Constitution, having thrown off a king, debated at length how to guard against a power-crazed president. But they didnโt anticipate political parties that put tribal loyalty over the country. That partisanship has rendered the high bars to a presidentโs removal โ a vote of two-thirds of the Senate for conviction after impeachment, or, under the 25th Amendment, action by the vice president and a Cabinet majority โ all but insurmountable.
That leaves the voters, who in special and off-year elections as recently as Tuesday have shown their zeal to punish Trumpโs party. We can hope that a new Congress will check him come January.
And we can pray.
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