Ideological passions make it difficult candidly to compare presidential contenders, past or present, in terms of competence, character, consistency, prudence, integrity, public spiritedness and the like. We react to them overwhelmingly as mere embodiments of tribal agendas we either applaud or abhor.
But the viciousness of Trump and the vacuousness of Harris seem unprecedented. He promises to end wars with a phone call and abolish inflation with a dirty look. She’s forgotten all about banning fracking, ending private health insurance and abolishing immigration enforcement (among other erstwhile follies) and is embarked on a “new way forward” as a yankee-doodle-dandy, put-on-a-happy-face patriot.
We who are about to be governed by one or the other of these eminences should be even more grateful than usual that America’s founders knew there would be days like this — when enlightened leaders would not be at the helm. It’s why they bequeathed to us a constitutional system of tangled checks and balances that is, above all, a tyranny-prevention and harm-reduction device.
And we should earnestly hope that whatever November’s election results, voters will at least avoid giving either of our dysfunctional parties a federal “trifecta” — one-party control of the presidency and both houses of Congress.
I quoted James Madison’s immortal admonition back in 2016, in a column arguing that “gridlock never looked so good” as it did that year. If anything, it looks even better now.
Even without partisan stalemate, the founders’ constitutional contraption has from the start provided a measure of “gridlock” in American government, an inherent difficulty in enacting sudden and sweeping change that has frustrated reformers (and extremists) throughout the nation’s history.