Donald Trump’s State of the Union tackle was the longest ever given. However to grasp its core goal — arguably, the core goal of his presidency — you want solely to listen to one line.
It got here throughout a dialogue of the SAVE Act, a Republican invoice designed to fight the fictional scourge of noncitizen voting. Democrats, Trump claimed, solely opposed the invoice as a result of “they wish to cheat.” After which he took it a lot additional.
“Their coverage is so dangerous that the one manner they’ll get elected is to cheat,” Trump mentioned on Tuesday night time. “We’re going to cease it. We now have to cease it.”
Take into consideration that for a second. That is the president of the USA, chatting with the nation in a ritualized nationwide tackle, claiming that the opposition occasion isn’t solely unsuitable on coverage however essentially illegitimate, a lot in order that in the event that they win an election it have to be as a result of they cheated.
Taken actually, that’s the president saying that the acknowledged coverage of his administration is stopping the opposition from profitable any future election.
We’re all so used to wading by means of Trump’s sea of hyperbole that it’s straightforward to push previous a bald-faced declaration of authoritarian intent. And to be clear, I don’t assume the SAVE Act — or anything Trump has proposed to date — might truly lock Democrats out of energy. There’s a actual hole between what he’s saying and what he’s able to doing.
Nonetheless, we’ve superb motive to assume that Trump actually does imagine that Democrats can not win with out “dishonest.”
When he final misplaced an election, in 2020, he claimed — and has continued to falsely insist — that the competition was stolen. His supporters took this so critically that, after a fiery Trump speech on the White Home on January 6, they marched on the Capitol constructing and ransacked the very chamber by which he spoke tonight.
He even referenced these grievances within the State of the Union, saying “this ought to be my third time period, however unusual issues occur.”
Trump’s vitriol is totally different from the “regular” partisanship of pre-Trump State of the Unions. Prior presidents may assault, and even mock, the opposite occasion’s coverage concepts. However they might deal with their opponents as political rivals: as folks they disagreed with who had been however companions within the shared undertaking of democracy.
In some ways, that’s the vanity of all the State of the Union custom: that the president, in talking earlier than Congress, is giving an accounting of his actions to the nation as a complete, divided in opinion however united in goal.
However Trump doesn’t see Democrats as opponents. He sees them as enemies.
I imply “enemies” right here within the particular sense utilized by interwar German authorized theorist Carl Schmitt. In his view, the liberal thought of politics — a group of political equals engaged in a shared undertaking of collective governance — was a fantasy. For Schmitt, politics at all times comes right down to a division between associates (these in your group) and enemies (these exterior it, who could also be legitimately excluded from political life and even killed).
Schmitt’s considering has loved a revival amongst MAGA intellectuals, a mirrored image in a part of the motion’s more and more Manichean view of American politics. Democrats, on this telling, usually are not simply unsuitable; they’re evil, an inside scourge bent on the destruction of America as we all know it.
And certainly, this was how Trump talked about Democrats within the State of the Union.
“These persons are loopy. I’m telling you, they’re loopy. Boy, we’re fortunate we’ve a rustic with folks like this,” he mentioned. “Democrats are destroying our nation, however we’ve stopped it, simply within the nick of time.”
At many occasions in the course of the rambling speech, Trump sounded optimistic, even sunny. However make no mistake: It’s this darkish Schmittian imaginative and prescient that dwells on the coronary heart of his politics.
