The consequences of Trump’s arrogant overreach were evident when the GOP caucus in the Senate overwhelmingly rejected his personal choice for majority leader, Florida’s Rick Scott, in favor of John Thune of South Dakota. Thune and the other less-than-slavishly-loyal choice, John Cornyn of Texas, received 29 and 22 votes, respectively, on the final vote. Scott, not a popular member of the Senate, ran a distant third and was eliminated on the first ballot. Trump also announced that "the Great
Elon Musk, working in conjunction with American Patriot Vivek Ramaswamy," will lead a new "Department of Government Efficiency (‘DOGE’)" to "pave the way for my Administration to dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies." The only problem is that this proposed department, with the abbreviation DOGE to promote Musk’s cryptocurrency, cannot be created by decree. So there will be firewalls. The more autocratic Trump tries to be, the more the antibodies of the body politic will kick in. Even the Roberts Supreme Court will reject some of Trump’s efforts to govern by decree. The Senate Armed Services Committee, far from rubber-stamping the nomination of Hegseth, will want to grill him on his outlandish
views, and is likely to reject Trump’s plan to turn the military into a personal force of loyal generals. One can imagine a sanity caucus in the Senate GOP, beginning with Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, and Mitt Romney of Utah. It will take only one more for the Senate to refuse to legislate Trump’s crazier ideas, and there are still a few sane Republicans in the narrowly divided House as well. Trump’s half-baked, poorly staffed, impulsive schemes may yet save democracy from Trump.
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