Remembering the number and danger of dozens of Executive
Orders issued by President Trump and his inner circle in recent weeks is
difficult, like treading the surface after going over a waterfall.
Try to catch your breath, with a little help from the Labor
Paper.
Workers, seniors, the needy and veterans all are especially
targeted, but literally every American could be affected by the onslaught of
decrees from the White House. Early this month, a single issue of the Washington
Post had these headlines:
“CDC removes gender, equity references in public health
material”
“Large sets of data are being scrubbed of references to
transgender and LGBTQ people, among others, which could compromise their use in
research”
“Trump sketches unprecedented plan for sweeping tariffs”
“Justice Department orders FBI purge, review of staff who
touched Jan. 6 cases “
“D.C. U.S. attorney fires Jan. 6 prosecutors, launches
new probes”
The same week, one afternoon edition of the Chicago Tribune
was dominated by:
“Trump’s orders have upended immigration”
“Trump’s FBI director pick Patel insists he has no
‘enemies list’ ”
“RFK Jr. on the defensive over his vaccine vows in
hearing”
“National parks are on the chopping block as Trump cuts
federal jobs”
“Destabilizing Mexico would make U.S. less safe and
wealthy”
“Trump blames DC plane crash on Biden, diversity
initiatives”
Concerning that last accusation (uttered without proof), the
Meidas Touch news site – edited by Marine, former prosecutor and ex-Florida
Republican Ron Filipkowski – commented, “Trump's handling of this situation
should be treated as one of the biggest scandals in presidential history.”
Again: Inhale.
But try to take in this flurry (or fury) from early February.
Trump announced:
his endangering the lives of critics including Gen. (ret.) Mark
Milley, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security adviser John
Bolton and public health expert Dr. Anthony Fauci by removing their security
details; starting to round up immigrants, planning to deport or incarcerate
them at Guantanamo, and withholding federal aid to states and cities unless
they help; killing funding for the bipartisan Infrastructure law; canceling all
federal collective bargaining agreements reached before he was president, notifying
1,100 Environmental Protection Agency workers they could be fired, and offering
more than 2 million other federal workers an inducement to quit (although
Congress hasn’t authorized the payout); that the State and Defense Departments will
no longer recognize Black History Month and making plans to restore the names
of 10 renamed Army installations to previous names of traitorous Confederates; strong
“free speech” protections but new steps to sue or shut down speech he didn’t
like; replacing prominent news media at the Pentagon with right-wing outlets
such as Breitbart and OAN;
purging the FBI of its six top executives, more than 20
heads of field offices and dozens of federal prosecutors who’d worked on cases
involving Jan. 6; the possible elimination of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
and also withholding disaster aid from California unless it passes a stricter
voter ID law; threats to take over Canada, Gaza, Greenland, and Panama’s Canal
Zone; possibly considering convicted felon Rod Blagojevich, the impeached
Illinois governor, as ambassador to Serbia (according to Politico); firing the
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts board and naming himself its new chair;
criticism of safety precautions about peanuts, schools using “spork” utensils,
and restrictions on plastic straws; anticipated cutbacks for the National
Endowment for the Arts and public media; ideas for opening public land for
exploitation; and firing at least 17 independent Inspector Generals who monitor
government corruption.
Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service, told
the Washington Post that Trump “is destroying whatever gets in the way of what
he wants to do. That includes having loyalty be the primary screen for choosing
his direct lieutenants and crushing the civil service and converting it into a
tool for his private agenda, as opposed to a force for the public good and the
rule of law.”
Trump also:
fired the National Labor Relations lead attorney and
one of its Board members so the agency won’t have a quorum to conduct business;
rescinded Temporary Protected Status for about 600,000 Venezuelans who came to
the U.S. at that offer; backed unelected billionaire Elon Musk who said he was
killing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which had recovered $19.6
billion for consumers since it started in 2011; supported Republican proposals
to tax worker benefits and GOP efforts to cut federal support to Medicaid
(which helped some 770,000 Illinoisans, according to the state’s Healthcare and
Family Services), revoked the Equal Employment Opportunity program for workers
and businesses; and threatened punishing tariffs imposed on Canada, Mexico,
Colombia and China.
In The Atlantic magazine, Ronald Brownstein notes that the
combination of steep tariffs, the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants,
major cuts in federal health-care programs like Medicaid, and attacks on
funding for public schools or even eliminating the Dept. of Education
altogether could produce a “quadruple whammy” for much of small-town and rural
America – MAGA country.
Ag columnist Alan Guebert wrote, “Less than two weeks into
the Trump Administration we have some idea about the overall meaning: picking
unnecessary fights with vital ag trade partners like Colombia, firing
government watchdogs like the U.S. Department of Agriculture's inspector
general, attempting to repeal the 14th Amendment's guarantee to birthright
citizenship, and making deep cuts to critical food aid programs like SNAP.
But wait: There’s more!
Before that series of edicts – after November’s election
through last month’s Inauguration – Trump also:
* freed all 1,600 or so people convicted in connection with
the Jan. 6 insurrection;
* withdrew from the global climate agreement, the World
Health Organizations and the International Criminal Court;
* removed thousands of webpages from Health & Human
Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Department of
Agriculture, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
* paused USAID and other federal funding for organizations in
a power grab called “impoundment,” which illegally prevents spending funds
Congress authorizes.
“The administration has carried out unlawful budget freezes,
massive civil servant layoffs and unconstitutional firings, directed federal
funding specifically to places with ‘higher birthrates,’ allowed an unelected
and unchecked billionaire to determine what our tax dollars are worthy of
funding, and more.”
Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) told the Associated
Press. “This is unacceptable and dangerous.”
Trump:
* let Musk send staffers to access Americans’ private
information at federal agencies including the Office of Personnel Management,
Treasury, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Small Business
Administration, and the General Services Administration, and payment procedures,
which some lawmakers said was a hostile takeover of the U.S. government’s
digital backbone. Musk said, “Regulations, basically, should be default gone.”
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said, “I am deeply alarmed that
Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, who has been given broad access to the
resources of the American people without election, vetting, or confirmation by
anyone, has reportedly gained access to the Treasury Department's payments
system. This access could potentially give him control of the funds Congress
has appropriated for health care, for housing, for child care, for small
businesses, and for students.”
* Trump’s nominations to his cabinet look too much like a
team of Village (Idiot) People, highlighted by ex-Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard
(with ties to Russia and ex-Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad), conspiracy
theorist RFK Jr. (who compared the CDC to “Nazi death camps” and claimed
COVID-19 was created to spare Ashkenazi Jews), and ex-Florida AG Pam Bondi (a
lobbyist and one of Trump’s defense attorneys). She was confirmed as U.S. Attorney
General after swearing under oath she would not seek revenge against Trump’s
political opponents, and then not long after taking office setting up a
“weaponization working group” to investigate those who worked on Trump cases at
state or national levels.
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said, “Pam Bondi has passed Donald
Trump’s Attorney General loyalty test with flying colors, whether by peddling
election lies or saying she will prosecute perceived enemies, and her
unflinching loyalty to the president-elect raises serious concerns about the future
of an independent Justice Department.”
Lurking in the shadows: ‘collaborators’?
As Trump and his Project 2025 handlers stomp on the
Constitution, trash government and insult allies and half of the U.S. electorate,
Republican leaders seem Mad.
As in, “What? Me worry?”
U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood (R-Peoria) seems comfortable staying
in lockstep with members of the GOP who appear to bounce between quivering like
blackmail victims or go-along-to-get-along members of the kidnap gang eager to
share the ransom, having given up on the hostage – our republic.
At a recent stop in Bloomington-Normal, the 56-year-old
Congressman entering his 10th year on Capitol Hill, seemingly excused
Musk and his ilk with making cuts, commenting, “I think it’s helpful anything
in the federal government to try to make sure money is spent in an effective
way, especially when we’re $36 trillion in debt.
“I’m going to give the new administration some discretion in
what they want to do,” he told WCBU public radio.
Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) in the Senate said, “This isn't
about politics. This isn't about policy. This isn't about Republican versus
Democrat. This is about tampering with the structure of our government, which
will ultimately undermine its ability to protect the freedom of our citizens.
If our defense of the Constitution is gone, there's nothing left to us.”
After appealing to his Republican colleagues to “say no to
the undermining and destruction of our constitutional system,” King asked them,
“Are there no red lines? Are there no limits?”
Indeed, Trump’s Project 2025 overreaches and Musk’s
intrusions have provoked lawsuits and a public response in the streets and
through the Capitol’s phone system. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said the
Senate’s switchboard usually receives about 40 calls per minute, but was
getting 1,600 calls each minute from people complaining about Musk.
And Trump and his regime have had some defeats in the courts,
too. A pro-democracy coalition of unions, democracy groups, state Attorneys
General and others have won major victories, from stopping Trump’s illegal
rewrite of the Constitution’s citizenship provisions to blocking his federal
firing scam.
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), sounding the alarm in
Washington, encouraged more grassroots engagement, saying, “We don’t have
years. We don’t have months. We have days to stop the destruction of
democracy.”
It’s worth remembering some historical perspective. As author
Raymond Lonergan quoted Louis Brandeis in his 1941 biography of the U.S.
Supreme Court Justice, “Mr. Justice Brandeis, Great American,” Brandeis said, “We
must make our choice. We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated
in the hands of a few, but we can't have both.”