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TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump holds up a signed memorandum after he delivered a statement on Jerusalem from the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington, DC on December 6, 2017. President Donald Trump on Wednesday recognized the disputed city of Jerusalem as Israel's capital -- a historic decision that overturns decades of US policy and risks triggering a fresh spasm of violence in the Middle East."I have determined that it is time to officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel," Trump said from the White House."It's the right thing to do." / AFP / SAUL LOEB Image Credit: AFP

Every presidential election is routinely called “the most important election” in history, producing sighs and eye rolls from political science types. But if you’re fond of democracy in America, the 2018 midterm election makes a stronger case for a superlative label than most presidential elections.

It appears increasingly clear that the Republican majorities in Congress would pose no serious obstacle to presidential lawlessness. True, committees in the House and Senate are looking into Russian sabotage, in the form of support for candidate Donald Trump, during the 2016 campaign. But it’s unclear if Republicans on those committees are willing to blame Russia for wrongdoing, let alone Trump.

In his brief presidential tenure, Donald Trump has already “defied, ignored, or shredded the whole previous system of norms about avoiding financial conflicts of interest and the use of public office for private enrichment”.

Trump has openly signalled that his Washington hotel and Palm Beach club — where he doubled the fee to $200,000 (Dh735,600) after his election, thereby putting an explicit dollar value on presidential access — are political souks. “He has, in short, drawn a very clear map to foreign interests about how to enrich him and his family and how to gain direct access to him in the process,” Jacob Levy, political scientist, recently wrote.

Issuing the equivalent of equity shares in a presidency has historically been frowned upon. But Republicans in Congress have taken no action. As Levy said: “Executive authoritarianism and lawlessness can be hemmed in and checked, but not fully constrained by courts, the criminal law, or the written Constitution.” In other words, Trump will see your Madisonian mumbo-jumbo and raise you an Electoral College.

This has obvious implications for the criminal investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller. In the wake of the indictment of Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and a plea deal signed by former Trump White House national security adviser Michael Flynn, along with the exposure of a series of lies (which keep coming) by senior White House aides and Trump himself about Flynn’s discussions with a Russian diplomat, the evidence of a conspiracy looks to be mounting.

Republicans in Congress, however, appear mostly determined to see and hear no evil. Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Orrin Hatch (Republican, from Utah) last week called Trump one of the best of the seven presidents he has served under. Likewise, conservative media organisations from Fox News to Breitbart have thrown a protective cordon around Trump. This only increases the pressure on Republican office holders to do likewise. Meanwhile, the Justice Department, which employs Mueller and his team, continues to be run by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whose commitment to uncovering the truth, let alone acting on it, appears sketchy at best.

The law may simply not be strong enough to bring down a president who defies it with the aid of a complicit Congress. Politics, backed by law, is the fulcrum required to expel a crooked, yet determined, executive. Without it, impeachment or resignation are a distant reach. Even a majority of public opinion agreeing about the nature of wrongdoing, and penalising Trump in 2020, may depend on the composition of Congress after the midterm elections.

Daniel Drezner wrote in a Washington Post commentary that 2020 will be the bell that tolls for American democracy, either sending it spiralling with Trump’s re-election or announcing its resurgence. But it’s taken less than a year for lies to become standardised and bogus counter-narratives operationalised. Imagine if criminal charges were to hang over Trump’s head for the next two years while the political system grows even more tattered and the legal system is jammed.

If Mueller targets Trump, there is dwindling reason to believe that the Republican coalition will accommodate his evidence. Mueller would be subjected to daily character assassination, his evidence viciously distorted, and his entire investigation dismissed as the product of a nefarious “deep state” too shadowy to identify.

Will the Business Roundtable rise up against a president who supports corporate tax cuts? American CEOs, few of whom would tolerate Trump as a business partner, have shown no interest in defending rule of law.

And what new moral affront could persuade Christian conservatives to abandon a man they already know to be economic with truth, adulterer and flouter of most everything ever claimed as Christian values? A sizeable segment of Republican voters will deny even the most incontrovertible evidence of Trump wrongdoing, and they will demand that Republicans not only inhabit their alternative universe, but defend it to the death. Conservative jurists — John Roberts, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, above all — will be similarly pressured.

Holding Trump accountable legally, even politically, may not be possible even with Democratic control of the House or Senate and the influence a Congressional majority provides. But it’s even more unlikely without it. And four years is a long time to live above the law.

— Bloomberg

Francis Wilkinson writes editorials on politics and US domestic policy for Bloomberg View. He was executive editor of the Week. He was previously a national affairs writer for Rolling Stone.