Monday, November 18, 2024
36.0°F

Trump and our democracy

by Carol Santa
| February 20, 2024 12:00 AM

As Trump collects delegates to clench the Republican nomination, we must understand his vision for our country. We hear nothing about health care, infrastructure, education, foreign policy, climate or the economy. Instead we hear insults and words of revenge.

The election of 2024 has been called the most consequential election of our time. So much is at stake if Trump wins.  

Ukraine will fall. Trump has stated he will not support additional money for Ukraine which will not only embolden his buddy, Putin, to continue his bloody quest, but will also undercut our NATO allies.  President Biden has strengthened NATO while Trump sought to weaken it.   

Multiple times Trump threated to pull the U.S. out of the alliance. Recently he ramped up his attacks on NATO and said he would encourage Russia to do “whatever the hell  they want” to member countries not spending enough on their own defense. Withdrawing from NATO didn’t happen his first term because influential people like former Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson found ways to restrain his behavior but this will not be the case in a second term.

 He has also stoked warm relationships with authoritarian leaders around the globe, including North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump described Kim Jong Un as a “great leader” and later said, “We fell in love.” Recently his words hark back to Adolf Hitler arguing that immigrants entering the U.S. illegally are “poisoning the blood of our country.” 

He is enamored with authoritarianism and jokes about being a dictator for one day. Don’t be so sure about his one day comment. If elected, he promises to stop all court cases against him, pardon the insurrectionists and change civil service laws so he can fire federal officials perceived as disloyal to him. He plans to order the military to crush protests in American cities and arrest political opponents. He promises to stack the judiciary with loyalists to do his bidding. He claims as president anything he does will be immune from prosecution forever. When his own statements sound like a dictator, we should believe him. 

In addition to his authoritarian stance, do we want a person with a deeply flawed character to be our president? 

The Washington Post’s fact-checkers documented 30,573 false or misleading claims during his presidential term, an average of about 21 per day. John Kelley, Trump’s chief of staff said, “The depths of his dishonesty is just astounding to me … he is the most flawed person I have ever met in my life.”   

He must pay over $350 million for fraudulent business behavior. He lied about hoarding classified documents that led to the Justice Department’s criminal indictment charging him with 40 criminal counts. And of course there was the insurrection where his lies about the election led to an assault on our Capitol.  

In addition, he has been accused by at least 26 women of sexual misconduct.

In a civil trial, a jury found that Trump sexually abused and defamed E. Jean Carroll, and with the court’s guilty verdict, he must pay her millions of dollars. Trump has already been indicted for hush money paid to a porn star to keep her quiet about an affair. 

Is he the role model we want for our sons and daughters? Donald Trump is the antithesis of Judeo-Christian character values.  

Liz Cheney, in her book, “Oath and Honor: A Memoir and Warning,” includes a quotation from John Adams inscribed above the fireplace in the White House state dining room that was taken from a letter he wrote to his wife Abigail after spending  his first night in the White House.  It reads, “May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof.” 

I agree with Liz Cheney when she says, “If Trump is on the ballot in 2024, we must do everything we can to defeat him…We will be voting on whether to preserve our republic.”    

— Carol Santa, Kalispell