American democracy is breaking in a very predictable way
Vox
0:00 I made in that article some very uh definitive predictions about the future.
0:04 At my more more mature self would
0:06 just admit to more uncertainty about everything.
0:09 But I do think that the sort of basic structural question that that piece raises
0:15 can get a little bit underrated these days
0:18 relative to things that are idiosyncratic to Trump.
0:21 I want to be clear on my agenda here.
0:22 So I'm not trying to slam you personally.
0:25 I'm not like Matt, you didn't predict that we would
0:27 elect this total political lunatic who would break the law.
0:30 Yes, yeah, to to invite you on.
0:31 No, no, no.
0:32 I'm just trying to give due credit to the weirdness of history.
0:55 So I am really excited to welcome to the Grey
0:59 Area Friday for the first time Matt Yglesias,
1:01 the co-founder of our esteemed website and now
1:05 current proprietor of the Slow Boring blog.
1:07 I don't know why I'm using such fancy official language for this, but Matt,
1:11 welcome to the show.
1:12 yeah.
1:12 Yeah, I don't know.
1:13 That was weird.
1:13 Get into a lot of a lot of words.
1:16 We are talking about an old essay that you wrote back in early Vox days,
1:21 the before times, 2015.
1:23 And so I do really want to emphasize that this was before it was published,
1:26 before anyone was taking Donald Trump seriously.
1:28 Right?
1:29 And and Matt wrote I'm I'm going to quote it
1:31 because it really just in hindsight it really hits you.
1:35 If we seem to be unsustainably lurching from crisis to crisis,
1:38 it's because we are unsustainably lurching from crisis to crisis.
1:42 The breakdown may not be next year or even in the next 5 years,
1:46 but over the next 20 or 30 years, will we really be able to resolve every one
1:50 of these high-stakes showdowns without making any major mistakes?
1:53 Do you really trust Congress that much?
1:57 So what is this breakdown that you were worried about, Matt?
2:02 And and I do want to talk about whether we're in it in a second,
2:05 but first I want to understand, right?
2:06 Like people are warning about American democracy collapsing.
2:09 You predicted American democracy collapsing.
2:11 Why did you predict that?
2:13 Yeah, I I was thinking, you know, not about Donald Trump or the particulars
2:18 of his personality or the particular nature of right-wing populism,
2:24 but about the structural properties of the American political system.
2:29 And I was elaborating on on the work
2:31 of the late Yale political scientist Juan Linz,
2:34 who had this observation that these presidential
2:38 type systems had always broken down
2:40 every place that they were tried except for the United States of America.
2:45 And, you know, he he wrote an essay in the early 1990s
2:48 and he was saying like why is America the exception to this rule?
2:52 And his take was that American political
2:56 parties were unusually low discipline and unusually non-ideological,
3:02 that they were these sort
3:03 of catch-all geographically very dispersed political parties.
3:08 Clearly, if you look at the time between 1994 and 2014,
3:13 that stops being true, right?
3:16 America moves to a much more tight
3:20 ideologically organized party system to, you know,
3:23 just yesterday I I last week rather I was saying,
3:27 you know, it's a shame that Democrats can't recruit former
3:31 Governor John Bel Edwards to run for the Louisiana Senate seat.
3:35 And, you know, people were telling me, well, it's like there's no point.
3:41 Um Louisiana's too red of a state.
3:43 You know, it doesn't matter who you recruit, it doesn't matter what you do.
3:46 And, you know, whether that's true or not, as a mentality, as an observation,
3:52 that's a sign of the rise of national ideologically coherent,
3:57 disciplined political parties rather than the traditional American model where,
4:02 you know, there would be a Louisiana Democratic Party and it would
4:05 just be very different from what you had elsewhere and there would be,
4:09 you know, a a Massachusetts Republican Party and and and looseness.
4:13 So, you know, I I was saying in advance of Trump,
4:16 in advance of this sort of mainstreaming of concern about democracy,
4:21 that the Obama era crises that we were having,
4:25 these standoffs over the debt ceiling, the multiple government shutdowns,
4:30 um him exerting executive authority over immigration in unusual ways,
4:34 that these were signs of the United States moving in a more,
4:38 I guess you would call it a a Latin
4:40 American type direction where the president and Congress
4:44 are ultimately going to butt heads and they
4:48 are both going to appeal to the people,
4:52 the military, the bureaucracy, whatever it is,
4:55 to say, you know, my way or the highway.
4:59 And and we saw um Nayib Bukele in in El Salvador, um you know,
5:04 has essentially pulled off a a classic Latin
5:08 American uh democratic collapse um several years ago where,
5:13 you know, he was he was clashing with Congress over something.
5:16 He was very popular.
5:17 He just kind of had the army come
5:18 in to parliament um and then he like purged the judiciary,
5:23 changed the constitution, etc.
5:25 etc.
5:25 etc.
5:26 Um and something like that could come to the United States is what I was saying.
5:32 American democracy is in the middle of a crisis, right?
5:34 I think we we all agree on that.
5:37 But it's not the classic Juan Linz crisis that you anticipated,
5:41 you described a similar scenario playing out in Honduras, right?
5:44 Where there's like these dual claims to authority between the legislature
5:48 and the executive and both claim reasonably to be the people.
5:51 The standoff can't be resolved and ultimately
5:53 the armed forces or someone has to step in.
5:55 That's not what's happening.
5:56 What's happening in the United States right
5:57 now is there's an executive who is just
6:00 doing whatever he wants and Congress isn't claiming
6:02 authority because Congress is part of his party, controlled by his party.
6:06 They're And so is the Supreme Court.
6:08 And so there's not even a a trilateral authority question.
6:10 There's no There's no question.
6:12 It's mostly just the president doing what he wants
6:15 and the other institutions kind of letting him do it.
6:18 So it's it's a little bit different, I think, Oh, I agree.
6:20 I mean, people ask me about this article
6:22 all the time because I'm not constantly bringing it
6:24 up because actually what I was talking about
6:27 there is pretty different from what's going on now.
6:31 You know, I I made in that article
6:33 some very definitive predictions about the future.
6:36 At my more mature self would just admit to more uncertainty about everything.
6:41 But I do think that the sort of basic
6:43 structural question that that piece raises can get
6:47 a little bit underrated these days relative to things
6:50 that are idiosyncratic to Trump um because you know,
6:55 he he's such a spectacular figure.
6:57 Like he gets a lot of attention, deservedly so,
7:01 but that can like blot out everything else that's that's going on at times.
7:05 Yeah, I want to be clear on my agenda here.
7:06 So I'm not trying to slam you personally.
7:09 I'm not like Matt, you didn't predict that we would elect this Well,
7:12 also I mean, that would be weird to just drag Yeah, to to invite you on.
7:15 No, no, no.
7:15 I'm just I'm I'm just trying to give due credit to the weirdness of history.
7:20 Yeah, look, what what I'm trying to do
7:22 more is probe the like whole whole Linzean
7:24 framework cuz I'm I'm I'm a little bit
7:27 skeptical that it diagnoses it diagnoses a way,
7:30 like a sort of symptom of a problem, but there often times it seems like it's
7:34 being caused by a deeper problem in the system.
7:36 The system, right, can output crises in various different ways,
7:39 however you structure it.
7:40 The Linzean critique is that it can break down
7:46 over frankly fairly I I don't want to say minor,
7:49 but like non-existential controversies, right?
7:54 That like you just have a disagreement between Barack Obama and Paul
7:58 Ryan about what the trajectory of the welfare state should be.
8:02 And it's like in retrospect it feels weird where people think that like,
8:08 oh, those were the good old days, right?
8:09 Like we weren't in this constant despair.
8:11 And it's true, like normal people were not in a state of constant despair about
8:15 the state of American politics in 2012
8:17 because the argument it was like heavily fiscalized.
8:20 It was about important, earnest, but like boring stuff.
8:25 And yet you couldn't just like meet in the middle and compromise.
8:31 And you also couldn't just like pass a bill that reflected
8:35 what one people liked and resolve it at the next election.
8:38 You had this thing where it was like for the government to function,
8:42 congressional Republicans needed to write a bill
8:46 and then the Democratic president needed to sign it.
8:49 The country almost defaulted and lots of people, like myself included,
8:55 were saying at that time that like you know,
8:59 like Obama shouldn't give in to this hostage taking.
9:02 He should invoke the 14th Amendment.
9:04 He should do, you know, X Y Z, blah blah blah blah blah.
9:07 Mint the coin.
9:07 Mint the trillion dollar coin, yeah.
9:09 And, you know, so this was like a very mainstream
9:11 center-left take was that the president should resort to gimmicks.
9:19 I I don't know what you want to call them.
9:20 I I don't want to overstate, but you know, move outside the bounds of normative
9:26 politics to sidestep this hostage taking tactic,
9:32 which itself was outside the bounds of normative politics,
9:36 but has become increasingly normalized over time.
9:39 And then I think House Democrats will feel pressured to use.
9:44 Um there's this political scientist her name is Laura Gamboa and she
9:47 studies the strategies that opposition parties
9:49 use in cases of democratic backsliding.
9:52 It's like one of the only people doing really rigorous,
9:53 interesting work about this.
9:55 Uh and the Venezuelan opposition back when Chavez was still consolidating power,
10:00 really screwed up badly.
10:02 Right?
10:02 And her view, uh, the reason they screwed up badly is that they
10:05 pushed too hard and ended up backing an attempted coup against Chavez.
10:09 Mhm.
10:09 And the coup failed.
10:10 Right?
10:11 And the coup failed and that gave Chavez
10:14 a pretext to to start really being authoritarian.
10:18 Right?
10:18 Because then it's, beforehand we can sort of try to push
10:22 at the edges and see what popular what people will support.
10:25 But afterwards, he's like, they tried to overthrow me.
10:26 I need to protect the sovereignty of our country
10:28 from America and these coup plotters and Chavez government.
10:30 they felt that Chavez was so obviously a threat
10:34 to the stability of Venezuelan institutions that it justified,
10:38 uh, this coup effort.
10:40 But then the coup becomes the justification for uh,
10:45 you know, hyper-empowering of of Chavez.
10:48 Um, not just domestically,
10:49 but but but I think I I think in the international arena,
10:53 you know, a lot of left-of-center people,
10:56 um, were sympathetic to that because there's, you know,
11:01 hostility to the record of right-wing coup efforts, um, in Latin America.
11:07 Right.
11:07 And and so the point I think that sort of nicely encapsulates your point, right?
11:11 She ends up coming to this conclusion
11:14 that the optimal opposition strategies are,
11:16 I forget the exact language, but it's something like moderate and institutional.
11:20 Is that instead of trying to overthrow the government
11:24 through military coup or even something more subtle, right?
11:26 Be like, we're going to stage a general strike
11:27 until they hold new elections or something like that.
11:30 What you do is you use leverage points in institutions, right?
11:33 Votes in Congress and, uh, you know,
11:37 maybe you can stage some demonstrations that are
11:39 designed to support this particular leverage point,
11:41 say try to stop bills from coming through that would
11:44 restrict your ability to participate in elections and then you
11:46 participate in elections and you get power back to a degree
11:49 and you start trying to reverse what they did.
11:51 But that those are two very different oppositional approaches, right?
11:55 The very confrontational one and one that really just
11:58 tries to work within the framework of the existing system.
12:01 But, you know, I spoke to her about
12:02 this and one thing that she says that she's changed
12:04 her mind on since early work is the role
12:07 of sort of extra-institutional strategies
12:10 in supporting those institutional pushes.
12:11 Like a protest that is designed to back up what a party is doing.
12:15 Um, and and to me that suggests is when we're thinking
12:19 about like how do you deal with these particular institutional crises,
12:24 you need to have a sort of broader framework for what oppositional politics
12:29 before we even get to the question of how to fix systemic design, right?
12:32 You have to answer the question of what do you do
12:34 in the system that is not working very well for a variety of reasons.
12:38 You know, I mean, there's there's a there's a question of tactics, right?
12:41 And there's a question of of substance.
12:43 And I think that's something that we've seen,
12:45 you know, throughout both Trump terms is that, you know,
12:47 mass demonstrations, um, you know, continue to be an efficacious,
12:52 uh, way to get things done,
12:54 uh, particularly if you, as was happening in in Minneapolis,
12:58 are concerned about like a specific object level grievance,
13:03 like you can you can make real progress, um, that way.
13:06 Um, there's there's lots of great work that's been done on, you know,
13:09 the strategic logic of of nonviolent resistance and I
13:12 think you really saw that play out in in Minneapolis.
13:15 Um, there's a question of the substance, right?
13:19 Like I think that most, um, I don't know, most, many,
13:25 and I think most center-left intellectuals have
13:29 reacted to the Trump years by adopting the view that the opposition party needs
13:36 to adopt a more substantively radical agenda.
13:41 You know, um, AOC was at the Munich Security Conference and and she
13:45 was making the case for this, that the fact that these, um,
13:50 authoritarian populist movements are gaining support
13:52 in her mind is evidence that dramatic uh,
13:58 substantive policy change from the left, uh, needs to happen.
14:02 Um, Waleed Shahid, uh, has has made this case, um,
14:06 criticizing me several times on his his Substack to say that like if liberalism,
14:11 uh, feels like it's it's being eaten away by a left-right horseshoe,
14:16 that shows that like center-left liberals need to become more radical.
14:21 Uh, my first boss, my, uh, you know,
14:23 you know, mentor in in many respects in this game,
14:25 Michael Tomasky, um, has a new piece out in in The New Republic, you know,
14:31 reflecting his his deep thoughts on what what Democrats need to do
14:34 from here and it's like Democrats need to go like all in on anti-billionaire,
14:40 um, kind of politics and he did,
14:44 um, interview, uh, you know, with the on a TNR podcast,
14:47 Greg Sargent hosting is is talking to Tomasky and, you know,
14:52 Tomasky starts saying there, um, well, you know,
14:55 all these guys like Bezos and Zuckerberg, um,
15:00 they're supporting Republicans now and Tomasky says like in good riddance,
15:03 like we don't need those guys, we shouldn't be taking their money, um, etc.
15:07 etc.
15:08 And you know, in the really recent past, right?
15:13 Like everybody is mad, everybody in Washington, D.C.
15:16 is mad at Jeff Bezos because of what's happening with The Washington Post.
15:20 In Trump's first term,
15:22 Jeff Bezos was an excellent steward of The Washington Post.
15:26 You know, he supported them, uh,
15:28 as they did excellent prize-winning reporting on the Trump administration.
15:32 Those journalists were repeatedly attacked by the Trump administration.
15:36 Trump also engaged in very classic authoritarian tactics, targeting Bezos.
15:42 You know, Trump was trying to damage
15:43 Amazon's business interests to retaliate against,
15:47 um, Bezos's stewardship of the Post.
15:51 Joe Biden becomes president and appoints an FTC chair,
15:58 you know, who is very young, very smart, but very young, uh, a little,
16:02 you know, underqualified, uh, for this kind of gig,
16:05 but who would become a big celebrity in left intellectual
16:08 circles because she wrote an essay saying that the basic
16:12 framework of American antitrust policy needs to be altered specifically
16:17 in order to be bad for the interests of Amazon.
16:21 Now, you know, maybe she's right.
16:24 Who knows?
16:25 Uh, but to me, if you're going to start like ranting
16:28 and raving about like like why are these guys all supporting Trump now,
16:31 like well, that's why.
16:33 You know, like if you if you take if as a wealthy person,
16:38 you take risks under an authoritarian, uh, interlude,
16:43 you come out on the other side of it
16:45 and like the newly empowered opposition just starts saying like,
16:50 you're[ __] no matter what as long as we're in, like
16:53 of course those politics are going to swing against you.
16:57 Um, and, you know, I think that this cycle of radicalization on the substance
17:05 of policy is essentially entrenching Trump's power
17:11 in a way that is really risky.
17:13 And so you have that on like
17:14 an elite level in dealing with the business community,
17:17 but you also have it in dealing with, you know,
17:20 policy questions that touch on mass opinion, that it's hard,
17:24 I think, to defend democracy uh, without being willing to, um,
17:30 accept like the actual existing cultural views
17:34 of the mass public and that to an extent
17:38 that itself is part of the crisis of democracy that we're seeing in the West,
17:43 part of why some of these multi-party systems in in northern Europe
17:47 are able to navigate it more successfully is that they allow for um,
17:53 a modicum of accommodation without, uh,
17:58 the center-left leaders needing to like compromise themselves.
18:02 You know, in a way that people find distasteful or unworthy,
18:05 um, or or or something else like that.
18:07 And so you can you can offer people
18:09 like normal politics as a solution to these things,
18:14 whereas I feel like I I read these takes on like what
18:17 Democrats should be doing and they
18:19 are essentially promising endless crisis politics,
18:23 uh, but just saying like we're we're going to win it this time,
18:26 um, which to me is like a very dangerous game.
18:29 When there's a perception that democracy is on the line,
18:32 a widely shared one, then it can unite previously fractious opposition groups.
18:38 You saw this in Poland in the last election, right?
18:40 They Right.
18:41 And then you see in Hungary right now, actually,
18:43 there's an alignment behind a center-right candidate who shouldn't win,
18:46 but because he's been able to break through
18:48 and he has unified support of the opposition, he actually might overcome a super
18:52 authoritarian electoral infrastructure and win.
18:56 Uh, and so it it and all of that, like it
18:58 is really essential to highlight partially the corruption of the regime,
19:02 but also that in question,
19:03 but also to to use democracy as an umbrella as an umbrella
19:09 issue that not only guides where you choose to pick fights,
19:12 but also like who it is that you include.
19:15 I think that democracy has been invoked in anti-Trump politics, uh,
19:19 by or I should say by Democratic Party
19:21 politicians in anti-Trump politics in fairly superficial ways.
19:26 You know, that, um, Joe Biden becomes president and you know,
19:32 there's a world in which there are several
19:37 prominent Republicans in his cabinet and he is saying,
19:42 I'm going to be a one-term president.
19:45 Uh, the mission of this presidency is simply to sort of, um,
19:50 secure accountability for the perpetrators of January 6th,
19:54 to get the country out of COVID.
19:58 There is going to be a primary in the Democratic
20:00 Party as to who should be my successor.
20:03 And like those people will argue about how much of an aggressive
20:07 policy agenda should we be trying to push in 2025?
20:10 But like I am trying to stabilize the country in partnership with Mitt Romney,
20:15 Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski,
20:17 like all these Republican senators who like voted Trump.
20:21 And the second thing who support NATO.
20:23 And there was clearly a side of Joe Biden who wanted to be that president.
20:28 You know what I mean?
20:28 There were like things he said that clearly spoke to it.
20:31 But at the end of the day,
20:33 the Democratic Party base, but also the Democratic Party elite,
20:38 like the the policy demanders in the Democratic Party did not want that.
20:44 They wanted aggressive action on climate change.
20:49 Um, you know, um, uh, Bill Cassidy in Louisiana, um,
20:53 will be out of the Senate soon because
20:54 he voted to convict Trump on impeachment charges.
20:58 Um, the Biden administration wanted to shut down uh,
21:02 offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico
21:04 because that's like a policy objective of theirs.
21:08 They didn't say like, well, we've got an ally,
21:11 you know, in Louisiana on the preservation of democracy.
21:13 And like we've got to work with him.
21:15 And we've got to work with Senator
21:16 Murkowski on on Alaska's natural resource management.
21:19 And you know, to me, that is a choice to not center democracy.
21:26 Whether or not you sometimes give a speech
21:28 about how the MAGA movement is undemocratic.
21:31 Right.
21:32 It it it is a choice to treat this as normal politics.
21:37 So, I um, I I just got back from Brazil.
21:39 And Brazil's a presidential system, but they also,
21:41 and we haven't talked about this yet, they also have a multi-party system.
21:44 Yes.
21:45 And that that made a huge difference when Jair Bolsonaro was president.
21:48 If you're not familiar with him, Matt, I know you are,
21:50 but if you're he he was basically he wanted
21:54 to act a lot like Trump did, I would say.
21:56 He was called the Trump of the tropics, that was his moniker.
21:58 He wasn't quite as aggressive with executive authority,
22:00 but he's a lot more aggressive than people remembered.
22:02 And then of course he at the end of his time he plotted an outright coup, right?
22:06 Like an actual military coup.
22:08 And they did their own version of January 6th on January 8th.
22:11 Um, and what's what's interesting is like I went
22:14 there to go study why their Congress and Supreme Court
22:18 were much more resistant during his time in office
22:20 to executive power grab type tactics than what we're seeing um,
22:25 in the US right now.
22:26 And like it turns out, I tried to resist this conclusion because I I
22:30 didn't it wasn't my prior when I went there,
22:32 but it turns out like a bunch of the answers the multi-party system.
22:35 Brazil has something like 20 parties currently registered in in its Congress.
22:40 And that made it incredibly difficult not only for Bolsonaro to like
22:44 jam through legislation cuz the Brazilian
22:46 system works on pork barrel trading basically.
22:48 Uh, but it also made it like really hard for him or any other
22:52 president to get partisan Supreme Court justices
22:54 through who were just like pure partisans.
22:56 So, the Supreme Court ends up being this like very rule of law,
22:58 good government group of people who are like sending
23:00 private text messages in 2020 about how Bolsonaro was Hitler.
23:04 And like are really working to organize against him.
23:06 Uh, and so it just it does really seem like there are institutional constraints
23:13 from the two-party system that mess
23:16 with the way the party makes decisions and makes
23:18 it just a lot more difficult to adopt a kind of popular front pro-democracy
23:25 movement than in in the way
23:27 that you've seen in some other backsliding democracies.
23:30 Yeah, no, no, no.
23:30 I mean I I I completely agree that there's no And this is why,
23:33 you know, I I advocated strongly back in 2021, 2022.
23:40 I was really hoping that you could get um,
23:45 uh, now former Senator Manchin, um, then Senator Romney,
23:50 Murkowski to form some kind of cross-party
23:54 caucus that would because clearly Manchin and Sinema,
23:58 probably some other Democrats,
24:00 were not thrilled with the direction that things were going in.
24:05 And I thought that there was a chance in the institutional
24:09 mechanisms of the American Congress to like actually pump the brakes there,
24:16 which was not like the way the Biden administration
24:18 was pursuing its legislative agenda was not a democratic crisis,
24:22 um, to be clear, but I think that it was not, um,
24:25 appropriately responsive to the democratic crisis that had
24:29 put them into office in the first place.
24:32 And that there was a need to find a way, um,
24:35 through the the logic of the American institutions,
24:39 which is just not friendly, right?
24:41 That if you if you look at what happened in the Biden years,
24:44 it was as if none of this Trump stuff had ever happened.
24:48 It was just the most normal thing in the world
24:50 that like you come in, you have a new trifecta,
24:53 it's really really narrow, but you brush off the fact that it's narrow,
24:58 and you just take your coalition's entire agenda, copy and paste it in, and then
25:03 the most moderate members of your parties are like, whoa, that's too much.
25:06 And so they edit it down, and then some of it goes through,
25:10 and then there's backlash in the public, and you lose ground in the midterms.
25:14 That's just like every American president's, right?
25:17 And the and the exception to that is the freak 9/11 midterms, um, of of 2002.
25:24 And that's weird, right?
25:27 Like it's it's weird to in what like I would say, you would say,
25:32 but also Joe Biden would say were like extraordinary times,
25:36 at critical times for American democracy, to just operate like on autopilot.
25:41 Um, but that is because the logic
25:44 of these political institutions is very powerful.
25:47 Like every administration, democratic backsliding or not,
25:51 like makes this exact same overreaching backlash mistake.
25:56 So, it's like I I mean, you know,
25:57 as a journalist we often call things mistakes, but as as uh,
26:02 informed deep thinking people, you're like,
26:05 am I really smarter than like every president
26:08 who's ever held office in post-World War II?
26:10 Or is it like not a mistake, right?
26:12 It's like it's something about the logic of the situation causes
26:17 people to do the thing that is not really smart, right?
26:22 And in a different institution, if you have a multi-party Congress,
26:26 it's like you can't do that.
26:27 There's just always some centrally positioned party
26:30 institutionally whose job is to be like,
26:33 "Ha ha ha, no, you can't do your agenda.
26:35 Like we've got to do some horse trading." I do
26:38 have to say that I am more persuaded after going
26:42 to Brazil that a multi-party coalitional system a coalitional presidential
26:46 system would work in the United States than I was beforehand.
26:50 Mhm.
26:50 Which is not to say I like have an here's how
26:52 to get from A to B as to how to do that, right?
26:55 That remains the big problem for any kind of structural
26:58 reform in American politics is they're all fundamentally precluded
27:01 by the incentives of the two parties that exist right
27:04 now who want to continue to exist in their current form.
27:07 But if there's anything that could push for like that could like break through,
27:11 this would be a constitutional crisis, right?
27:13 Or some kind of just not to say I'm rooting for that.
27:15 I'm saying that the worst things get,
27:17 the greater the possibility is for some kind of radical structural reform.
27:22 Well, and that was fundamentally the point of my piece
27:26 was to try to say that like I don't I did not think at that time that it
27:32 was very likely that we would avert uh, crisis fully.
27:37 But that if we understood the kind of institutional, um,
27:42 drivers of crisis, there was a better chance that when a crisis arose,
27:49 we would try to adapt in a in a useful way to it rather than I mean,
27:55 it's hard to know, right?
27:57 Um, but again, a part of my point was that we have
27:59 a tradition in a history in Latin
28:01 America of like backsliding and then resliding,
28:06 but then backsliding again because you haven't like done anything,
28:11 um, about this, right?
28:13 So, like, um, Venezuela has had uh, a lot of back and forths,
28:19 um, over the years um, in in different kinds of things.
28:22 And that, you know, what you want is what Brazil had, right?
28:25 Which was that they came out of their last, um,
28:28 period of military rule with a different constitutional system that, um,
28:34 some people uh, say is now like more more robust,
28:38 um, than the one that they had before.
28:40 And like that's good.
28:41 That's a good idea.
28:43 Especially because I mean,
28:45 I was not envisioning like an actual military dictatorship and, you know,
28:50 um, hard authoritarian rule.
28:53 But it's like, you know,
28:55 the the president has command control authority over all these people,
29:00 uh, people with guns, um, and it's always it's always out there
29:05 as a possibility that orders are given and orders are followed.
29:09 And if there's some legal stamp on it, like why wouldn't they be followed?
29:14 This actually is the big mystery of the Brazilian case,
29:16 incidentally, is like why the military said no to the coup.
29:18 Cuz they were offered it.
29:19 There was a a sit-down meeting where there was a plan presented to them.
29:22 And like two out of the three top generals said no.
29:25 The the admiral, the head of the navy, said yes,
29:27 but the head of the air force and the army
29:28 and the army guy who's really the one who mattered said no.
29:31 Hard to do a coup with boats.
29:33 Yeah, exactly.
29:34 That's basically the wrong branch of the armed forces.
29:37 No, he got the wrong one.
29:38 And to like to this day nobody knows why.
29:40 So, right?
29:41 So, so to that point, right?
29:42 It's like when it when politics get
29:44 down to that point of constitutional rupture,
29:47 it's it's not even clear that presidential
29:50 command and control authority is what matters.
29:52 What matters are is the decisions made by the guys
29:55 who command the loyalty of the people with guns.
29:58 Sure.
29:58 And again, I mean notably notably what some of the first stuff that Trump
30:03 did was in a legal but highly
30:05 irregular way change up the senior military command.
30:10 Right.
30:10 Yep.
30:11 And in the United States and you know this is
30:13 one reason that I'm always like people ask me
30:15 questions about stuff and I'm always like oh it's complicated
30:17 because sometimes a president does something that's like flagrantly illegal.
30:23 Right?
30:23 Other times a president does something that's like
30:25 100% the most legal thing in the world.
30:28 There is no doubt that the president of the United States
30:31 is within his rights to relieve the chairman of the Joint
30:34 Chiefs of Staff and replace him with somebody else of his choosing
30:37 who will then be duly submitted to the Senate for confirmation.
30:40 That is like an unquestioned legitimate presidential power.
30:44 But it would be so much more eyebrow raising
30:48 as a turn of events than you know you like issue
30:54 an executive order about like some regulatory agency and then
30:58 the court's like lol no that's not what the law says.
31:01 You're breaking the law man.
31:03 Because as you say like what matters on some
31:06 level is like what happens when orders were given.
31:11 You you know you're talking about like
31:12 we don't really know what happened in Brazil.
31:14 I I think it remains slightly unclear exactly
31:17 what was going on on January 6th Yeah.
31:20 at the highest levels of the American government.
31:22 I mean there is a a view that you know Nancy Pelosi
31:28 and the Joint Chiefs and Mike Pence kind of like worked something out.
31:34 Yeah it's it's it's a very difficult to divine from the public record.
31:38 You look at this and you're like is that there certainly was a period
31:41 of time when Trump wasn't doing anything and yet National Guard were deployed.
31:46 And so did so what what happened there?
31:49 Right.
31:50 I mean and it seems like he was de facto taken out of command authority.
31:59 That's to say really.
32:02 And you know and maybe in some ways this was unwise right?
32:04 I mean Mitch McConnell and Trump seem to have
32:10 either through explicit understanding or or just mutual convergence right?
32:14 Around like Trump was not convicted of impeachment
32:17 charges and also Trump stopped messing around.
32:21 You know for the final weeks of his his presidency and like
32:24 perhaps it would have been all for the better if Trump had
32:27 like issued flagrantly illegal orders and forced the question on the Senate
32:33 and like been removed from office and had the heartbreak inside the Republican
32:38 Party between you know the the MAGA cult and the conservative defenders
32:44 of of democracy but instead we got that in a in a soft
32:47 way and and it's all it's all come back and we
32:50 you know it's like Susan Collins just up for re-election in Maine.
32:57 And but she voted to impeach Trump right?
33:00 But like she's in the Republican Party
33:01 and voting to confirm these judicial appointees and like
33:05 it's it's a very vexing situation for everybody
33:07 and you know I guess she'll probably
33:09 lose in in November but um I guess like my main point about everything is
33:16 that just like ratcheting up polarization is not
33:22 really the solution to these kinds of things.
33:25 Like you you I I would also vote
33:28 to defeat Susan Collins at election in Maine but it's
33:32 like in a stable democracy you need there
33:35 to be some people who are right of center.
33:39 You need like people who stand for right of center ideas
33:43 but like also stand for democracy and and constitutionalism and we keep instead
33:48 just like grinding those people out as they fail to do anything
33:51 efficacious and as our institutions don't
33:54 mediate any kind of stable coalition formation.
33:57 Matt I unfortunately have to let you go.
33:59 That's going to do it for us after a conversation
34:01 I hope you enjoyed as much as I did.
34:03 This episode was produced by Beth Morsey and Thorn Newwriter.
34:07 It was edited by Jorge Just engineered by Shannon Mahoney and Christian Ayala.
34:11 Theme song is by Emma Munger.
34:13 The show is part of Vox.
34:15 Support Vox's journalism by joining our membership program today.
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34:22 of this show let us know and specifically
34:24 let them know it's because of me right?
34:25 Not Sean me.
34:27 And then Matt thanks for being here.
34:30 While I can plug myself where can people find your work?
34:34 Find me mostly on my substack slowboring.com.
34:38 I also have a new a new experiment I'm doing
34:40 where I have AI writing articles about local news in DC.
34:44 It's called DC local.substack.com and it's
34:48 I think a pretty cool interesting experiment.
34:50 what I understand the robot's trained on your writing style right?
34:52 So you can actually get like it's Robo Matt really writing this stuff.
34:55 I mean it's very insulting to me to see what
34:58 AI thinks I write like but you know that's fine.
35:02 All right.
35:02 You heard the man right?
35:03 Go subscribe to Matt's website and and Robo Matt's local politics website.
35:07 You should go listen to both of them.
35:09 Thanks Matt Matt thanks for coming.
35:10 It's great talking to you about this stuff.
35:13 Thanks for watching.
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