My Independence Day post sparked an audacious idea:
In 20 years the January 6 attack on the Capitol will be celebrated the way we celebrate the Boston Tea Party.
Sure it was illegal and destroyed property, but it was the voice of the people, and it helped us create new, better government. They were patriots!
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| 1976: Celebrating Heroes |
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| 2046: Celebrating Heroes |
My July 4 post described an exhibit I worked on 50 years ago for the Boston Bicentennial. Our goal was engagement and relevance. We asked exhibit visitors, "What would YOU do?" The exhibit confronted visitors with current day choices that were parallel to the events of the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord. We had filmed scenes of those key Revolutionary War milestones, doing so in a way that made them recognizable as versions of current news.
The Boston Massacre looked suspiciously like an anti-busing demonstration that got out of hand. The Boston Tea Party looked suspiciously like an anti-tax demonstration that turned violent and destroyed property. Lexington and Concord involved caches of weapons intended to be used against the government.Visitors were startled to realize that maybe -- just maybe -- the issues were complicated and they did not sympathize completely with the patriots and Minutemen militia.
Acts of lawlessness and violence have been important milestones in the creation of the government of the United States. There was the Revolution itself. Suppression of the Whisky Rebellion established that the federal government would maintain order against rural anti-tax rebellions. The Civil War led to a second set of constitutional amendments to establish Black equality and equal protection of the law. The civil rights demonstrations led by Martin Luther King, Jr. were noteworthy for their effort to avoid violence, but they took place at a time of riots and arson in Watts, Detroit, and other cities. Cities in flames were a message to Americans that the legal and financial condition of Black Americans had become untenable.
Mass demonstrations are messages to government. Sometimes they get hijacked and backfire. The George Floyd demonstrations are an example. They started out making a point about discriminatory policing, but were hijacked by thrill-seeking vandals. Some cities failed suppress this violence in astonishing acts of political malpractice, with the result that the message was reversed. That happens.
President Trump is the most consequential president of my lifetime. His audacity and willfulness are changing the American form of government by demonstrating the structural weakness of the Constitution. There are no effective checks and balances against an executive who chooses to ignore them. American presidents were not restrained by laws. They restrained themselves by obeying norms and expectations and patterns of practice. They nibbled at the edges of their power but never blasted through them. Trump does exactly that. He does what he wants and dares others to stop him. He doesn't try to be "fair." He picks winners and losers to increase his power and influence. This week he allocated FEMA disaster money to red states and denied it to blue states, and said openly that he is doing this because he can, and he proudly favors states that voted for him, so take note.
Trump proved that the USA has always had a Constitution that allowed an elected dictatorship, if a president chose to act as one. Trump is an American strongman. Congress and the courts have only a single power -- impeachment and conviction -- and in a country with a well-disciplined political party system, getting a two-thirds majority of the Senate to convict would require an extraordinary failure of governance. But that is the new operating system for America, and Americans are beginning to realize it: The president leads freely until he screws up very, very badly.
Americans may well settle into this new arrangement and decide that they are OK with it. Trump is currently unpopular, but an economic upturn could change that. His gerrymandering, and the fecklessness and division of Democrats, may preserve his majorities, but in any case he is conviction-proof in the Senate. There is little appetite in America to restore Congress to centrality of policy. Congress has an approval rating of less than 15 percent. The president leads; Congress is a Greek chorus, applauding or cheering.
If this new form of serial dictatorship is confirmed by one or two more elections in which we elect a Trumpish successor, then it will have been established as the new form of government structure and practice. Voters in 2024 took a giant step toward sanctioning this form of government when they elected Trump notwithstanding the January 6 events.
The January 6 attack on the Capitol turns from transgressive into heroic when the event is interpreted as a necessary growing pain of political change. It becomes a Boston Tea Party event. It makes the point that the voice of the people must be heard to keep a strong president in office. Presidents will be understood to embody the will of the people, replacing the out-of-date notion that the will of the people is represented by the mishmash of competing ambitions described in the Constitution. Historians and political scientists and opinion journalists will confirm the new reality.
The Boston Tea Party is understood as a heroic act by patriots because the Revolution was successful. History is written by the victors. The official White House website on January 6 exprsses this point of view already.
Will this predicted future happen? It might well. Americans care about peace and prosperity, not democratic process. "It's the economy, stupid."
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