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kpete

(71,994 posts)
Fri May 12, 2017, 05:10 PM May 2017

The Rise of a Despot



John Cassidy: “It is often said that the U.S. Presidency is a relatively weak office—but that is a contingent statement. To prevent the President from gaining too much power, or abusing that power, the Founding Fathers divided authority among the different branches of government, and established some fundamental governing principles. These are the fabled checks and balances, arranged, as James Bryce, the British jurist, noted in his venerable 1888 tome, ‘The American Commonwealth,’ to ‘restrain any one department from tyranny.'”

“But the checks and balances only work if each of Bryce’s departments agrees to play its allotted role. A President enabled by a spineless and supine Congress that fails to exercise its oversight powers isn’t a weak executive at all: he is a potential despot. Using his authority to hire and fire federal officials, he can rapidly remake the government to his own design, appointing loyalists to key positions, eliminating potential threats, and undermining alternative repositories of power.”

“Authoritarian leaders in foreign countries seize and maintain power this way. And, despite his bungling start, this is the project that Donald Trump appears to have embarked upon.”




http://www.newyorker.com/news/john-cassidy/donald-trumps-craven-republican-enablers?mbid=nl_170512_Daily&CNDID=21493341&spMailingID=11011670&spUserID=MTMzMTc5NzcyNzUwS0&spJobID=1161068671&spReportId=MTE2MTA2ODY3MQS2
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