President Donald Trump and his administration are “emboldened” by the “fear” and “obedience” his policies have created, a political analyst has claimed.
The president has sparked worries across the country with recent ICE shootings and the ongoing cost-of-living crisis at play. The capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and the ongoing desire to subsume Greenland into US territory has also been a sore spot for members of the public.
But those decisions are made because the administration feels free to take riskier moves as it knows the president will pardon them, The Hill columnist William S. Becker believes.
He wrote, “President Trump and his people are so emboldened that they don’t even bother to hide their ill intentions. They know that if they commit crimes on his behalf, he will pardon them.”
Becker went on to suggest that Trump and his administration had “sacrificed America’s moral authority to oppose Russia’s and China’s forceful acquisitions of other sovereign states.”
He added, “The U.S. is supposed to be different, but Trump sees the world as an extension of himself — a place where bullies gain wealth and power by mistreating others and controlling them with fear.”
The columnist went on to suggest Trump had created a sense of compliance among some of his more outspoken critics as they feared what the president could do to them if they remain critical of his decisions in office.
“Trump uses taxpayer money and federal institutions — for example, the U.S. Department of Justice, the world’s largest law office with 10,000 tax-supported attorneys and 25,000 investigators — to harass, sue and prosecute those who disagree with him,” Becker claimed.
“Even if legal action is groundless, it places enormous emotional stress and expense on his critics. It also creates “anticipatory obedience” among those who might challenge him.”
Pressure from the Trump administration on critics and the Democratic Party could worsen following the midterms, with a “Civil War”-like response expected from one political analyst.
Should the Republican Party suffer heavy losses at the election in November, Trump could push for further ICE agents and National Guard representatives in Democrat-held states.
The Washington Post suggested, “After the Civil War, paramilitary groups and mobs used violence in the South to prevent Black voters from casting ballots, and a century later law enforcement attacked civil rights protesters as they fought segregation.”
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