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Your guide to what the 2024 US election means for Washington and the world
The most important task of the US legislature โ Americaโs first branch of government โ is to check the executive. By that measure, the countryโs 119th Congress has lost its purpose less than two months after going into session. Donald Trumpโs administration is explicitly pursuing a โunitary executive theoryโ of the US presidency that largely bypasses Capitol Hill and has scant basis in constitutional law. Instead of asserting its prerogatives, Congress is rolling over.
Bodies created by law can only be undone by law. Yet Congress has done nothing to stop the closure of USAID and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The Department of Education looks to be next on Elon Muskโs target list. Congress created the role of inspectors-general whose job it is to blow the whistle on waste, fraud and abuse in federal agencies and departments. It raised no objections, though, when Trump summarily fired 17 of them in his first week. Congress has the power of the purse. Yet only portions of the judiciary, Americaโs third branch of government, have objected to Trumpโs spending freezes and Muskโs budget clawbacks.
The lionโs share of the blame for Capitol Hillโs passivity belongs to Republicans, who have narrow majorities in both the Senate and the House of Representatives. Those who still believe the Republican party is a normal political outfit are turning a blind eye.
Here is a sample of resolutions proposed by Republican lawmakers in the past few weeks: Floridaโs Ann Paulina Luna wants Congress to pass a law adding Trumpโs likeness to Mount Rushmore alongside presidents such as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln to reflect his โtowering legacyโ; New Yorkโs Claudia Tenney proposes to make Trumpโs June 14 birthday a federal holiday alongside Washingtonโs; a bill from Tennesseeโs Andy Ogles would amend the US constitution to allow Trump to run for a third term so he has time to restore โAmerica to greatnessโ. North Carolinaโs Addison McDowell would rename Washingtonโs Dulles airport the Donald J Trump International Airport to thank him for the new โgolden age of Americaโ.
Such displays might have embarrassed George III, who praised Washington as the โgreatest man in the worldโ for shedding his military commission after the revolutionary war. But the runes are more ominous than that. The Alaskan senator Lisa Murkowski, was a rare Republican voice in rebuking Trump for โembracing [Vladimir] Putinโ after Fridayโs humiliation of Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Many, however, chose to amplify a fringe reporterโs complaint that Ukraineโs president had failed to wear a suit. None has objected to Muskโs regulation baseball cap and T-shirt, let alone to the unconfirmed billionaireโs ex officio usurping of Congressโs fiscal prerogative. Musk has not even been summoned to testify.
The US Senate once boasted of being the worldโs greatest deliberative body. Yet it has confirmed patently unqualified nominees to lead the Pentagon, the Department of Health and Human Services and as Director of National Intelligence. Musk corralled Republican waverers by threatening to spend millions to eject them.
The Democratic Party, meanwhile, is responding to Trumpโs power grab with routine manoeuvres. Though in the minority and lacking teeth, Democrats also seem to have lost their tongue. As Trump has single-mindedly shown in recent years, a minority party can upend national perception when it acts in unison. There are stirrings of pushback outside the US capital in town hall meetings and protests at Tesla showrooms. Peaceful opposition is a sacred American right. Congress was meant to hold the presidency to account on behalf of the people. In its absence, the states, business, civil society and the public must occupy that vacancy.


