Defending Democracy is Not a Partisan Issue

Commentary by Jerry Lanson

I went to New York City this week for a few days’ vacation. By the time I got back, Donald Trump’s Defense Department had stripped articles about the Holocaust and 9/11 from its website. His acting head of Social Security was threatening to shut down the agency that provides me and some 73 million others with monthly checks. And Trump had moved to dismantle the Department of Education, the source of programs ranging from educational support for public school students with disabilities to loans and grants for college students. 

There’s much more cutting and outright obliteration to come, of course. It seems to be the only certainty in American politics today. 

That’s why we all need to put aside the imprecise political definitions that too often serve to separate us from one another. Instead, we need to work together to restore the very foundations of our democracy.  I’m not interested in whether you define yourself as a liberal, a conservative or a libertarian. I don’t care whether you are a progressive, a moderate, or something else.  I do care whether you are serious about being pro-American – the kind of pro-American who believes in the constitutional, democratic form of government that has allowed the United States, with all its imperfections, to be a model for the world for many decades.

Do Not Ignore

If you embrace the Constitution, there’s no honest way to shrug as the Trump administration attempts to obliterate or rewrite history.  There’s no way to ignore the potential theft of Social Security benefits from recipients who saved them throughout a lifetime of work. There’s no way to stand silent as the government strips agency after agency of the capacity to provide basic national support, from predicting deadly storms to tracking the spread of disease.

It's true. There’s a difference between a threat and an action. When CNN reports that “articles about the Holocaust, September 11, cancer awareness, sexual assault and suicide prevention are among the tens of thousands either removed or flagged for removal from Pentagon websites,” the network is reporting on an action.

When, as The Washington Post reports, the acting head of the Social Security Administration is “consulting with the … Justice Department as he threatens to shut down the agency …. A dramatic move [that]… would immediately begin halting benefit payments to millions of Americans,” it is reporting on a threat.  A very sizable threat.

The pace of both actions and threats in the first two months of the Trump Administration is unprecedented.  Judges threatened with impeachment for doing their jobs in a co-equal branch of government, universities threatened with the loss of hundreds of millions in federal funds, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris stripped of their security clearances.

Is this the democracy you learned about in American history classes?  Is it the kind of America you want to live in?

“The president of the United States has essentially declared war on the rule of law in America,” former federal judge J. Michael Luttig told MSNBC (he’s a conservative if you insist on embracing labels). “In the past few weeks… the president himself has led a full-frontal assault on the Constitution.”

Steven Levitsky, a Harvard University political science professor and the co-author of How Democracies Die, put it this way in an interview with The New York Times.  “I’ve never seen anything like it…. These first two months have been much more aggressively authoritarian than almost any other comparable case I know of democratic backsliding.”

That is why in today’s United States there is only one political fault-line that carries overriding importance. On one side are those who believe in democracy and the Constitution in this country. On the other are those who actively or passively support their destruction.

None of us individually can stop what’s happening. Collectively, we stand a chance. I urge you to attend public forums, show up at congressional town hall meetings, find your way to one of the mass protests being planned across the country on April 5. 

And I urge you to speak out, not hide behind the illusory safety of silence. That just allows things to slide further and faster toward the abyss of unchallenged authoritarianism.

Contributing Pundit Jerry Lanson writes Jerry’s Substack.