The federalist

Authoritarian rulers consider ways to prevent Trump from becoming president after the civil war.

At⁣ long last, wake up and notice‌ the moment. Hear the argument.

Anti-Trump legal scholars have been ​arguing that the third ⁣clause of the⁤ 14th Amendment, a post-Civil War measure barring Confederates from‌ holding⁤ public office after participating in an ‌insurrection, can ⁢be used against Donald ‍Trump. Attaching a broken boxcar to the⁢ back⁢ of⁣ this moving train, an Aug. 25 essay at Politico casually ⁤compares​ the case for 14th Amendment disqualification from the​ presidency to the disqualification of southern congressmen during the Civil War.

You may have already spotted a problem in that last⁣ sentence⁣ because⁣ the⁤ story Joshua ⁣Zeitz writes about Trump and the ​14th Amendment ‍has nothing to do with the 14th Amendment: It’s a story about the refusal of the House ⁣of Representatives⁣ to take notice of southern‍ congressman in 1864, well before the Reconstruction amendments were⁢ ratified. With that in mind, go read‌ it.

The subtext speaks louder than the​ text. Notice the framing; notice the language that⁢ colors the argument.‌ Here’s how Zeitz describes the ‌context⁤ for the ⁢14th ⁤Amendment: “They ⁤had vanquished​ the‍ Confederacy and compelled Southern states to remain⁤ in the Union.”

Here’s⁢ how he opens his description ⁣of the ⁢contest over ⁢who would ‌be seated in the ‌House ‍in 1864:

These events alarmed and appalled⁣ most Republicans, and especially radicals⁣ like Rep. Thaddeus Stevens ⁣of Pennsylvania,⁤ the grim-faced, irascible “Dictator of the House.” With his piercing gaze ‍and ruthless authority, Stevens, ‌who served as ‍chair of ‍the Ways and​ Means Committee during the war, was ⁢also the unspoken floor ‍leader for the House ‌Republican caucus. He maintained tight control over the chamber, even as he⁣ advocated policies that were far more radical than his caucus in his‌ desire to⁣ punish the South and impose Black ‌political and economic equality. Stevens‌ advanced the ⁣idea that the Southern states ‌were “conquered territories,”⁣ their residents no longer​ citizens of the U.S. and certainly not entitled to govern themselves, ‍let ​alone participate⁣ in the ⁤governance of the whole nation.

So what should we do about Donald Trump? Well, ⁤there’s this great moment ⁢in history in which a grim-faced​ dictator maintained tight control for the purpose of implementing radically punitive policies over conquered territories‍ to ⁤dominate people who were not entitled to govern themselves.

That’s the discussion we’re ​having. The people‌ Angelo ⁣Codevilla called ​the ‍American ruling⁤ class,‌ the civil war.”>hegemonic⁣ academic-political-media⁤ hive people, are now casually discussing Trump and Trump ‍voters as a conquered people who have to be dominated⁤ and kept out of the system of self-government. Because Trump⁤ is a dangerous authoritarian, you see.

Start looking for this unstated premise, and you’ll start finding it everywhere. There are ​no legitimate arguments to the right of Hakeem Jeffries; there is only dangerous Putin-influenced extremism that must be ‍firmly suppressed. We are not engaged in anything resembling political debate.

I find NYU professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a hilariously obtuse expert on authoritarianism,⁢ an especially helpful⁤ source for parsing ⁤the eliminationist radicalism of the moment because she has the quality of mind that allows her to slop her⁤ givens all over the ⁣page without ever thinking about them at all. What should we do⁣ about Trump? Well, “lots of other heads of⁣ state have been prosecuted, convicted, sentenced ⁢to jail or house arrest,” so we just need to‌ be ‍more like the countries ⁤that⁤ imprison their political leaders. In fact, “Trump arrest=democracy⁤ in ‍action.” ⁢What‍ should we⁣ think of the presidential candidacy of Vivek ⁣Ramaswamy? It’s authoritarian⁣ for him to‌ be allowed a platform because it’s “designed to get more poisonous extremist ideas into the mainstream and further degrade democratic politics.” Allowing Republicans ‌to speak is an extremist assault on democracy; arresting them is “democracy⁣ in action.” And again, that’s ‌where we are.

Politico, ⁤the house organ of the American ruling class, has ​an‍ idea ⁤about how we can deal with Trump⁢ and his⁣ supporters, and their ‌idea calmly starts​ with a comparison to ​the way the federal‌ government ​dealt with the vanquished Confederacy.

It’s‌ no longer⁣ correct⁢ to say the mask is slipping.⁣ At⁣ this late‌ moment, ‌there is no mask.


Chris ⁢Bray is a former infantry sergeant in the ‍U.S. Army, and has a history PhD ​from the University of California Los ‌Angeles. He is the author of “Court-Martial: How Military⁢ Justice Has Shaped America from⁢ the Revolution to 9/11 ​and Beyond,” published last year by W.W. Norton.

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