Thinking the Unthinkable, Again

Author: Harlan Ullman

Last week’s column raised some truly terrifying “what ifs” that even seven or eight years ago were deemed unthinkable. But that field is so fertile and ripe, that a second or even third column would not exhaust the range of these now possible or at least plausible scenarios. A convicted felon being elected president from jail was one.

But suppose the trials for Donald Trump were deferred until after the 2024 election simply because of the massive scheduling problems. A defendant running for president might also be argued as a reason for delay. It is 2025 and Trump is in the White House.

Suppose the president had to stand trial while in office and was found guilty in the Georgia case on a conspiracy charge to change the outcome of the 2020 and sentenced to prison. The president has no pardon authority as this is not a federal case.

Trump could refuse to comply with the Georgia law. Georgia has no way to compel compliance or to arrest the president. Further suppose this case made its way to the Supreme Court that validated the conviction and sentence for imprisonment. The Supreme Court has no army or police force. The president does.

Imagine the crisis that would ensue if the president repeatedly refused to comply with the law. Would the cabinet or vice president have the courage to invoke the 25th Amendment on the grounds that the president was incapacitated by incarceration? And suppose the president still refused to stand down?

Unlike Nixon, a devoted anti-communist who could pull this off, aided by the need to counterbalance the Soviet Union then, Biden carries no such political bullet proof vest.

If someone wrote a novel or a screenplay based on this plot, would it ever had a chance of being published or made into a movie? Probably not. Yet, here is where we are.

A more immediate possibility is not just a government shutdown that conceivably could have a lengthy duration. The House is beginning an impeachment inquiry to determine if President Joe Biden committed any “high crimes and misdemeanors.” And House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is fighting to save his job.

Suppose the motion to vacate the Speaker, i.e, calling for a vote of no confidence, is made? Last time it took fifteen ballots to elect McCarthy speaker. It is not impossible that the House could take longer to choose its speaker, leading to gridlock and possibly extending any government shutdown for weeks or more. And if it were not McCarthy, what Republican might be acceptable as speaker?

McCarthy could be forced to do the unthinkable. He may have to turn to Democrats for enough votes to keep the chair. But at what cost and what concessions would McCarthy have to make to ensure continued Democratic support? And suppose McCarthy then went back on his word?

The irony is that a MAGA supporting Republican would be forced to abandon his ideological convictions. This means the Democrats would win de facto control of the House and, along with the Senate, both branches of government. Think of how a Biden White House could exploit this change of fortunes and what this would do to Trump’s chances in 2024 if he won the nomination?

The fundamental question is how desperate is McCarthy to retain the speakership. And what would be the long term ramifications? No doubt Trump and other MAGA Republicans would excommunicate him. Unthinkable? Maybe not.

Given how China has become public foreign enemy number one surely to a supermajority in Congress and to many Americans, suppose President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping pulled off a Richard Nixon-Mao Zedong rapprochement? The Malta meeting last weekend between National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and China’s foreign minister Wang Yi could have been the precursor with Wang tentatively scheduled to visit Washington in the next weeks or months.

In his trip to India’s G-20 meeting and then to Vietnam, Biden went out of his way to explain that the US is not out “to contain China;” that America is “not looking to hurt China;” and that “we are all better off if China does well.” These were unmissable signals that Biden is seeking to ease tensions and reduce the frictions with China on the entirely sensible and reasonable grounds that any conflict is no one’s interests.

Unlike Nixon, a devoted anti-communist who could pull this off, aided by the need to counterbalance the Soviet Union then, Biden carries no such political bullet proof vest. He will face the “slings and arrows” from both Republican and Democratic critics. Yet, this volte face may no longer be unthinkable. And it may be imperative.

He writer is a senior advisor at Washington, DC’s Atlantic Council and a published author.

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