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Commentary: The nightmarish end to Donald Trump’s presidency

There are deep concerns about what the US leader may do in his remaining two weeks, say the Financial Times' Edward Luce.

Commentary: The nightmarish end to Donald Trump’s presidency

US Capitol Police push back demonstrators who were trying to enter the US Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. (Photo: AP/Jose Luis Magana)

WASHINGTON DC: Ninety minutes before rioters stormed Capitol Hill, US president Donald Trump addressed many of the same people using unequivocally inciteful language.

“You’ll never take back our country with weakness,” Mr Trump said. “You have to show strength.”

His personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, also called on the crowd to conduct “trial by combat”.

A mob made up of “Make America Great Again” protesters, Proud Boys and other far-right groups took them at their word. What followed was desecration.

READ: Woman shot in US Capitol unrest has died

READ: Guns and tear gas in US Capitol as Trump supporters attempt to overturn his loss

‘AMERICAN CARNAGE’

Four years after Mr Trump warned of “American carnage” in his inaugural address, he got what he wanted. The scenes of insurrectionists, some of them armed, ransacking Congress will go down in infamy in American democracy.

Nobody should feign surprise. Mr Trump has been vowing to “take back control” since before he took office.

During the build-up to last year’s presidential election, Mr Trump repeatedly predicted that it would be the most corrupt in America’s history. Since losing, he has been broadcasting that falsehood ever more loudly.

Donald Trump speaks in a video after protesters stormed the US Capitol. The video has been taken down by Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

He said it again on Wednesday (Jan 6) afternoon — in the Twitter video he released urging his supporters to pack up and go home. (Twitter later took it down.)

On Twitter and elsewhere, Mr Trump has fuelled the QAnon conspiracy theory that Washington is controlled by a deep state of paedophiles. Now a large minority of Americans believe the US election was fraudulent.

No wonder some were ready to storm Congress just as it was meeting to certify Joe Biden’s victory. The only surprise is that there were not more.

Listen to Prof Chan Heng Chee and BowerGroupAsia Managing Director James Carouso explain how America came to be so deeply divided amid a bitterly fought election on CNA's Heart of the Matter podcast episode published in November 2020:


WOULD TRUMP DECLARE MARTIAL LAW?

The most pressing question now is what Mr Trump might try to do in his remaining two weeks in office. Senior military in the Pentagon have discussed at length how they would respond if Mr Trump tried to declare martial law, using the 1807 Insurrection Act.

Some around Mr Trump, including Michael Flynn, his former national security adviser, have been urging him to invoke it. After supporters stormed the Capitol, Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter, called them “American patriots” in a tweet she later deleted.

The concern about what Mr Trump can still attempt to do is not academic. In spite of what happened on Wednesday, Mr Trump still commands the personal loyalty of many people in uniform.

One reason why the mob so easily breached Congress is because many of the Capitol Hill police officers were clearly in sympathy. Some even took selfies with the insurrectionists inside the Capitol building.

READ: Pelosi says Biden win certification to resume once Capitol secure

The contrast with how Black Lives Matter protesters were treated last June when law enforcement violently cleared Lafayette Square to make way for Mr Trump’s photo-op was glaring.

Had African-American protesters tried to storm Capitol Hill, or the White House, there can be little doubt that bullets would have been used.

WHAT NEXT FOR REPUBLICANS?

The next question is how many Republicans will continue to support Mr Trump’s “stolen election” narrative.

Shortly before Congress was invaded, Mitch McConnell, the outgoing Senate majority leader, had repudiated Mr Trump’s attempts to declare the election a fraud.

Critics will say Mr McConnell’s surprisingly forceful address was a day late and a dollar short. But he was able to state reality forcefully when it mattered.

READ: Commentary: Trump’s last stand will see dramatic endgame for US election play out in Congress

READ: Twitter locks Trump's account, threatens permanent ban over violations

The same cannot be said of Ted Cruz, the Texan senator, Josh Hawley, the Missouri senator, and more than 100 of their colleagues in both houses.

Their theatrical protest against the election certification was interrupted by a real-life assault on the building in which they were speaking.

In his speech, Mr Cruz said the fact that so many Americans believed the election was a fraud posed “a profound threat to our country”. Here was a classic case of the arsonist posing as a firefighter. Fifteen minutes later, the session was abruptly halted.

Supporters of President Donald Trump walk the hall outside the Senate Chamber inside the Capitol, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021 in Washington. (Photo: AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

As senators were being hurried to safety by Capitol Hill police, Mitt Romney, the Utah senator, who has been a rare Republican voice warning of Mr Trump’s authoritarianism, yelled to GOP colleagues: “This is what you’ve gotten.” He was right.

Agree with him or not, Mr Romney speaks for the party that used to care about the US constitution, law and order, America’s standing in the world, and civility in politics.

Those who have thrown their lot in with Mr Trump are now tied to his mob. They may not have expected events to turn quite so dark. But that was the gamble they took.

As former US President John F Kennedy said in his own inaugural address: “Those who foolishly sought power by riding the back of the tiger ended up inside.”

Source: Financial Times/sl

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