Trump's Blatant Corruption and the Erosion of Democracy
The Rise of Blatant Corruption
Donald Trump's presidency has been marked by a consistent disregard for ethical norms and a blatant disregard for the law. As his mentor Roy Cohn counseled, Trump never admits wrongdoing or apologizes, but occasionally evinces a qualm. However, in recent months, Trump's actions have become increasingly brazen, with the president pilfering money directly from the US treasury.
The IRS Deal and Its Implications
Trump's recent deal with the Internal Revenue Service was by far the most flagrant act of corruption yet – perhaps in US presidential history. First, he sued the agency for $10 billion for its alleged negligence in guarding his and his companies' tax returns from being leaked to the press. Then he dropped the suit in return for a $1.776 billion slush fund to repay his friends, possibly including the January 6 insurrectionists, for the suffering inflicted by their criminal penalties.
The Erosion of Democracy
The autocrat does not just flout the law; he renders it so fungible that as social or moral framework, it becomes meaningless. There is no use trying to stay on the right side of the law when you don’t know from day to day which side is right. Trump's impunity once rested on confidence of his unconditional adoration, but now he is discovering that he needs neither party nor votes nor love to exercise power.
Fighting Autocracy-Enabling Cynicism
How do we fight this autocracy-enabling cynicism? We don’t have to fool ourselves that things are better than they are. It is “possible to imagine situations where we might be in a state of despair without being in the state of giving up”. The first blow against autocracy is the refusal of cynical complacency. Right after Trump’s first election, the Russian émigré M Gessen proposed some “rules” for surviving autocracy, including: “Be outraged ... [I]n the face of the impulse to normalize, it is essential to maintain one’s capacity for shock.”