If you enjoy this preview, I hope you’ll consider upgrading to a paid subscription. For those who don’t have or want a Substack account, you can keep Off Message going with a donation. All support is appreciated, and donations of $75 or larger come with a comped annual subscription—all content unlocked and emailed to the address provided. There’s no contradiction between Donald Trump’s deepening unpopularity—and his evident commitment to further unpopular conduct—and his intensifying assault on democracy and the rule of law. When democratic politicians become unpopular, they try to understand why, then they try to mend things. They know it’s important, existential in some cases, to regain their lost support, in part or in whole. People like Trump, on the other hand—outright fiends and enemies of democracy—merely sees greater urgency to steal power. The bulwark against this, the reason most liberals don’t seem concomitantly alarmed and outraged, is public opinion itself. A panic-driven consolidation of power is unlikely to be popular. The more aggressive it is, the greater the backlash, like a Chinese finger trap…for freedom! Through contempt for fair play, and judicial corruption, Republicans have stolen perhaps 10 House seats already, before a single general-election ballot has been cast. But the public is in growing revolt against MAGA rule, leaving Democrats heavily favored to win the House, at least by the numbers and rules. And since this isn’t a presidential election—in which case Trump would only care about his own race—he and his loyalists are up against the fact that there are 435 House elections every cycle, and control of the chamber turns on scores of elections, not just one. The tipping point seat will be some district Trump won by a very small margin. Democrats are poised to win anywhere from a handful to a couple dozen seats beyond that one. Stealing a midterm requires overturning all of those elections one way or another. Then on top of the logistics, we know from painful experience that Trump isn’t one for plausible deniability. He defaults to out-and-out fraud, making calls on speakerphone to various state officials, and asking them to nullify ballots or stuff ballot boxes enough to flip outcomes. In the past, they have proven reluctant. So in that sense it’s reasonable to see Democrats pick themselves up off the ground, lick their wounds, and double down on electoralism. It’s also good in that fear without a plan breeds panic and reveals weakness. Resolving to win is absolutely wiser than free-floating doomerism. “He’s all powerful and going to steal it from us! Ahhh!” This is not an appeal of any kind. If anything it just discourages civic participation. But Trump is clearly going to try, and it is at least something of a problem that Democrats don’t seem to know how to respond beyond trying to run up the score at the ballot box. Let’s start with the elements of the scheme that we can already see clearly.
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