MAGA Republicans are seething with rage because Biden hit
his target
By Greg Sargent
Columnist|
September 2, 2022 at 11:18 a.m. EDT
Republicans are in a rage over President Biden’s speech in Philadelphia, in which he flatly declared that the American democratic experiment is in serious danger due to Donald Trump and the Republicans who remain allied with his political project.
So here’s a question for
those Republicans: What exactly in Biden’s speech was wrong?
Many objections have been
general: Republicans say his speech disparaged millions, that it
was angry, or divisive, or political, or hateful, or depicted Republicans as the
enemy.
In coming days, these
Republicans will retreat into right-wing media safe spaces to fulminate without
facing cross-examination. But when they venture into mainstream forums, they
should be pressed on specifics.
Let’s take Biden’s most
fundamental claim about the MAGA-fied GOP and democracy:
Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that
threatens the very foundations of our Republic.
Biden elaborated:
MAGA Republicans do not respect the Constitution. They do not
believe in the rule of law. They do not recognize the will of the people. They
refuse to accept the results of a free election.
Some Republicans insist they
do respect the Constitution and the rule of law. But Biden carefully
distinguished between MAGA and non-MAGA Republicans, casting only the
former in these terms.
The category of “MAGA
Republicans” is vague. But we can certainly say a whole lot of them — including members of Congress — were largely
supportive of Trump’s effort as president to overturn his election loss.
That MAGA coup
attempt included extraordinarily corrupt
pressure on
many government actors, including law enforcement, which flouted the rule of
law on its face. It involved pressure on Vice President Mike
Pence to violate his constitutional duty. Pence himself said he was being asked to betray basic tenets
of constitutional democracy.
Many Republicans who are now
professing outrage supported all that. A review of their own conduct proves
Biden right.
Biden also said this:
They look at the mob that stormed the United States Capitol on
Jan. 6, brutally attacking law enforcement, not as insurrectionists who placed
a dagger at the throat of our democracy, but they look at them as patriots.
Biden also accused “MAGA
forces” of fanning “political violence.”
Republicans sometimes say
those who committed violent crimes should be prosecuted. That may be sincere in
some cases, but again, what Biden said just does apply to
Trump and the GOP’s MAGA wing.
This week, Trump strongly suggested that if elected again,
he would pardon untold numbers who violently attacked the U.S. Capitol to
prevent a legitimately elected government from taking power. Trump also said he would issue a government apology,
meaning the Jan. 6 defendants are persecuted victims. This drew not a peep from
most elected Republicans.
Meanwhile, other MAGA
Republicans actually have called the Jan. 6
defendants “political prisoners” or otherwise described the rioters as
patriots.
Many continue to hand-wave away or actively cover up Trump’s own role in
inciting that violence, implying it was perhaps excessive but motivated by an
underlying just cause.
Here’s more from Biden on
MAGA:
They’re working right now as I speak in state after state to give
power to decide elections in America to partisans and cronies, empowering
election deniers to undermine democracy itself.
He amplified:
And they see their MAGA failure to stop a peaceful transfer of
power after the 2020 election as preparation for the 2022 and 2024 elections.
Which part of this do
Republicans deny?
Right now, dozens of Republicans are
seeking positions of control over election machinery, with Trump’s active
support, while campaigning explicitly
on their refusal to acknowledge that Biden was legitimately elected president. All of that represents
a threat to use the power of their offices to treat future Democratic election
wins as subject to nullification.
And so, the openly
declared intentions of Trump and those MAGA Republicans show that they
undeniably do pose a threat to our democratic system at a bedrock level.
Does that mean the system
couldn’t recover if all Jan. 6 defendants walked or if Trump (or an imitator)
and his allies illicitly overturn a future presidential election?
Not necessarily. But their
actions are plainly a threat to our foundational democratic bargain, in which
electoral losses are accepted as binding and the losers live to fight another
day, and a hard line is drawn at political violence.
On that latter score, in
fact, some scholars of political breakdown fear that the MAGA takeover of large
swaths of the GOP really does portend future political
violence and instability. Not civil war, necessarily, but higher levels of violence
directed at
influencing or contesting political outcomes.
And so, at a fundamental
level, Biden’s core claim — that Trump and the swaths of the GOP allied with
him pose a foundational threat — is absolutely reasonable.
Here’s the most basic point
of all. Despite screams that Biden’s speech was dictatorial and cast MAGA as the enemy, he said this:
There are far more Americans, far more Americans from every
background and belief, who reject the extreme MAGA ideology than those that
accept it. And folks, it’s within our power, it’s in our hands, yours and mine,
to stop the assault on American democracy.
That’s a call for Americans
to defeat Trump and MAGA in a manner that is peaceful and democratic.
Biden is saying that an anti-MAGA majority exists in this country
that can and must mobilize to stabilize our system.
And the idea that this
majority is out there and exists for the rousing — well, that’s what enrages
Republicans most of all.