Organizers of the “No Kings” protests are planning hundreds of rallies this weekend to remind the country that the President is not a monarch. Why does Donald Trump give so many people the impression that he is trying to be one? Why would he want to be one?
The short answer is that Trump wants to accomplish through undemocratic means what he cannot accomplish through democratic means. One of his favorite gambits is to declare a national emergency about something, and then claim dubious emergency powers to impose his policies. In the first six months of his second term, he has already done this several times.
The power to tariff
Consider his trade policy. Although the United States has been running a trade deficit with the rest of the world for the past fifty years, President Trump has now declared this a national emergency. He claims that his emergency economic powers allow him to impose tariffs on foreign goods unilaterally, although the Constitution clearly assigns that power to Congress.
He has tried to sell his tariffs to the public by claiming that foreigners will pay them. As more people come to realize that American importers and consumers will pay them, support for tariffs has declined sharply. Some supporters remain, such as domestic steel companies hoping to benefit by higher prices on foreign steel, but they are outnumbered by the companies and consumers relying on foreign goods. If a democratic vote were held today, Trump’s sweeping tariff proposal would lose.
The power to defund
Another part of Trump’s undemocratic agenda is his war on the administrative state, the federal government agencies that carry out mandates given them by Congress. Here he has used the “emergency” of the longstanding budget deficit as an excuse for drastic cuts to the federal workforce, especially in agencies he dislikes, like the Agency for International Development, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
The Constitution gives Congress the power to spend, and the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act bars the executive from refusing to spend what Congress has allocated without its permission. Russell Vought, Trump’s budget director and major contributor to the Project 2025 blueprint for radically conservative government, has encouraged Trump to violate this law in the hope that the Supreme Court would then declare it unconstitutional.
Americans are always interested in reducing “waste, fraud, and abuse,” but they are not very keen on closing Social Security offices, reducing veterans’ services, defunding cancer research, firing weather forecasters, or weakening consumer protections. Ironically, now that Trump must work with Congress to pass a budget, he supports the “One Big Beautiful Bill” that the Congressional Budget Office and most economists expect to increase the deficit. That raises suspicion that the assault on the federal bureaucracy was never about deficit reduction in the first place, even if Elon Musk wanted it to be.
The power to deport
President Trump’s favorite “emergency” justifying extraordinary powers is immigration. Here he has had more popular support, especially for preventing illegal border crossings and deporting immigrants who have committed other crimes.
He could have pursued these goals legally, in cooperation with Congress. Instead, he told lawmakers during the campaign to kill the bipartisan bill that would have tightened border security and provided some path to citizenship for migrants who have been here many years. Meanwhile he riled up his base with a disinformation campaign associating immigrants in general with violent crime, a correlation that the evidence does not support. Having promised to prioritize criminal deportations, his administration then proceeded to order Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to deport large numbers of immigrants with no criminal records as quickly as possible. Finding and prosecuting criminals just doesn’t meet the quotas, and giving people their day in court takes too long to please Trump.
Many Americans who support normal criminal law enforcement are distressed to see armed and masked ICE agents rounding up people they consider harmless, like restaurant workers, strawberry pickers, students on the way to school, or job seekers in Home Depot parking lots, let alone mothers dropping off their children at day care centers. Most Americans do not support forcing the immigrant parents of U.S.-born children to choose between leaving their children behind or depriving their children of their rights as citizens. Trump’s solution was to try to end birthright citizenship by executive order, in blatant defiance of the Constitution.
The power to intimidate
When people protested these policies, Trump declared the protests themselves an emergency justifying the militarization of law enforcement. He deployed the National Guard and other military forces without the consent of local authorities, telling a federal court that he was putting down a rebellion against the United States. (Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem suggested a more sinister motive—“liberating” the people of California from their “Marxist” leadership, as if the administration had a right to overturn California elections too.) Trump promised that further protests would be met by overwhelming force, a stunningly hypocritical position for a president who failed to mobilize the military to defend the Capitol on January 6, and then pardoned the rioters convicted of assaulting and injuring police officers.
If Trump is going to mobilize the military for every small and mostly peaceful demonstration—misleading portrayals by right-wing media to the contrary notwithstanding—his kingdom will soon look a lot like a police state. We don’t need too much imagination to see him responding to the social unrest he helps create by declaring martial law and arresting opposition leaders, Putin style. He has already said that arresting Governor Gavin Newsom is “a great idea.”
Federal courts have ruled that many of Trump’s actions—imposing tariffs unilaterally, impounding federal funds, deporting migrants without hearings, and deploying the National Guard to put down an imaginary rebellion—exceed his authority. That covers a lot of his agenda, making Richard Nixon’s domestic lawlessness pale by comparison. Many of these rulings are on hold as the administration pursues its appeals. Nevertheless, the protestors—by which I mean the peaceful majority—are often the ones with the law on their side, while the administration is the larger threat to law and order. President Trump said the other day that he is certainly not a king, since he is having so much trouble getting what he wants. Let’s hope we keep it that way.
Posted by Ed Steffes 