The shapes of things to come
Some thoughts and speculations on the possibilities of what can happen next
The working assumption of many in reaction to the re-election of Trump as President is that he will serve a full term.
And that is the most likely outcome, as that is what presidents tend to do once elected: they serve out their term.
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But there are other possible outcomes.
Some outcomes are morbid, and they are possibilities for any president, especially for one advanced in years.
And there is the possibility he may step down mid-term - or be replaced mid-term.
If Trump stands down mid-term, the new President Vance could pardon him for all and any federal crimes (though not state crimes). This would meet one of Trump’s presumed objectives for having re-run for President.
And if the timing of the replacement is done just right then a President Vance has the prospect of up to (but not quite) ten years in office: here the Twenty-second amendment to the US constitution provides:
“Section 1. No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once. […]”
If the replacement is done on the day after the second anniversary of the start of the term, then there would seem nothing to prevent a President Vance from then running for election and then re-election as President.
[Edit - in other terms: (2 years minus one day) plus 4 years plus 4 years.]
It can also be noted that in a way Trump has done his job for his backers in getting re-elected and, accordingly, there is nothing more he can personally do for them which another friendly occupant of the Oval Office cannot also do. If their objective is dominance over the medium- to long-term then they will be already thinking about the approach to the 2028 election.
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And if there are doubts (real or otherwise) about the cognitive alertness of President Trump there is also the Twenty-fifth Amendment, where a President can be effectively removed against their will, on declaration of the (well) Vice-President and others.
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On the other hand, a President Trump serving a full term may suit his backers just fine.
Trump is not a President to personally drive legislation through Congress - he is not a Lyndon Johnson or a Franklin Roosevelt.
But with a Republican Senate he does not need to do so: they can drive through the legislation themselves, subject to the final composition of the House of Representatives.
What a lazy president enables is for those around him to dominate the judicial nominations and discretionary powers.
So we can expect a raft of conservative nominations for the judicial benches - and for Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito to stand down and be replaced by 40 or 50 year-old strong conservatives, nominated by Trump and approved by the Senate. That will secure the Supreme Court for the conservatives for at least another twenty years, if not more.
And we can expect a huge amount of Executive Orders and such like, which in turn will be upheld by conservative judges - for who needs congressional legislation when you can have the combination of executive rule-making and nod-along judges?
Those around Trump will not be the inexperienced incoming staffers of the 2017 presidency, but people who know what to do and how to do it, many with hard experience of the first Trump presidency.
They will know what to do so as to fit things around a golf-playing president.
Trump himself may not be busy, but those around him will be.
Brace, brace.
Always incisive thank you
I have thought for a while that Trump's backers would ditch him to clear the way for Vance - I have read his appointment was not Trump's first choice but was urged on him by his son and "tech bros". I had not understood how the timing would work. This is chilling.