Trump’s grip is not as tight as he thinks it is

On the night immediately following ICE agent Jonathan Ross’s fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis on Wednesday, Jan. 7, my sleep was disturbed by visions of the ensuing protests around the country exploding into an “American Spring.” In Washington, D.C., where I live, I saw a vast rising of demonstrators besiege the White House, then overrun the place. The president and his key advisers fled the compound by helicopter, and a mob ransacked the abandoned executive mansion and the adjacent executive office buildings.

Lesser White House staffers fled into tunnels beneath the White House complex and tried to slip away into the city. Not all escaped, however. Some were cornered and beaten. In the general chaos, deaths occurred on both sides. For many hours, Trump’s whereabouts were unclear, but then it emerged that he had flown to a U.S. Navy ship in the Atlantic and eventually retreated to Florida and the gilded fastness of his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach County. He was guarded there by various elements of federal security agencies and by a cordon comprising thousands of the most die-hard MAGA faithful.

In the capital city, the mob was gleeful, but the event was a tragedy. Our country had walked the path of Sri Lanka, Egypt, Tunisia, the Philippines, Bolivia, Honduras and many other countries in the Americas and beyond whose leaders had so outraged their populations that those leaders had to flee the people to save their own skins.

Crowd control barriers line the front of the headquarters of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at 500 12th Street SW in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. Protesters had gathered outside ICE headquarters the previous night to protest Wednesday’s fatal shooting in Minneapolis of a U.S.-citizen civilian, Renee Good, by an ICE agent, Jonathan Ross.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley

There was a time when I could not dream to countenance such developments in the United States of America. Our country was different. Manifestly different. But on Jan. 6, 2021, everything changed.

On that day, Congress, acting in a constitutionally mandated exercise, was meeting in a joint session to conduct the pro forma task of certifying the electoral college results that established Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election. Donald Trump, the incumbent and soon-to-depart president, had urged his supporters across the country to assemble in Washington on that day. On what was then known as Twitter, Trump declared: “Big protest in D.C. on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!”

On the appointed day, Trump hosted a rally on the Ellipse at the south side of the White House. Although at one point he urged the enormous crowd to act peacefully, his words in their totality were highly aggressive and provocative. “And if you don’t fight like a hell, you’re not gonna have a country anymore,” he said near the end of a fiery speech, which also featured the recently minted lie that the 2020 election had been stolen from him. Then he told the crowd that “we’re going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue — I love Pennsylvania Avenue — and we’re going to the Capitol … and we’re going to try and give our Republicans — the weak ones, because the strong ones don’t need any of our help — we’re going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country. So, let’s walk down Pennsylvania Avenue.”

The “pride and boldness” that the Republicans in Congress needed, in Trump’s mind, was the will to interfere unconstitutionally with the certification of Biden’s victory in the presidential election.

The crowd marched down Pennsylvania Avenue as a “they” rather than as a “we,” since Trump was not among his supporters for that procession (apparently having been diverted by the Secret Service), and laid siege to the United States Capitol. Trump’s supporters ultimately forced their way into the place and rampaged through it in a display that disgusted all decent Americans and shocked much of the rest of the world. From that disgraceful episode several deaths resulted, including that of Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter shot by a police officer as she tried to climb through a breach in a locked door well inside the Capitol.

When I heard Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Trump and Vice President JD Vance justify last week’s fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis as an act of self-defense by ICE agent Ross, my mind inevitably ran back to the shooting of Babbitt inside the U.S. Capitol building, which she had penetrated deeply as part of a violent criminal mob. Since her death, Republicans have lionized her as a martyr, casting her as the faultless victim of a murderous police officer. The second Trump administration even agreed to a nearly $5 million settlement in a wrongful death lawsuit brought by Babbitt’s family.

I suppose the same will happen for Renee Good under the next Democratic president. If it does, it will not necessarily be a good thing, merely evidence of a further hardening of the “us” and “them” division in the country. The right looks after its own when it has state power, and the left looks after its own when state power swings back into its hands. Tribal politics.

And this brings me back to Donald Trump and his behavior as president. The posture of Trump and his administration has been deeply offensive to the values to which this country has long clung — even though too often the country has viewed those values too lofty or inconvenient to be honored. At home and abroad, the attitude of Trump and his administration is broadly adversarial. Trump’s malignant personality has reshaped all of government to project the idea that if anyone objects to what Trump wants, what Trump wants will be obtained anyway — by threat, by corrupt use of state organs such as the Justice Department or by naked force. And because Trump is fundamentally dishonest, discerning his motives in many situations is like unpicking the Gordian Knot.

Thus we have the supposed peacemaker president invading Venezuela and seizing its fraudulent leader Nicolás Maduro in an exercise of thug vs. thug. But what is the real reason? Is it to use Venezuela’s heavy crude oil, which the U.S. does have the capacity to refine, to prevent a fuel-price shock here at home when Trump decides to topple the Iranian theocracy in the interest of Israel and Saudi Arabia. (Remember that the Sunni kingdom has urged the U.S. in the past “to cut off the head of the snake” that is Shiite Iran because of Tehran’s feared nuclear activity.) Trump, for various reasons, is eager to please both Riyadh and Jerusalem. And both would rejoice at a defanging of Tehran. But rare is the plan that survives contact with the stresses of reality.

A demonstrator coming from the vicinity of the White House carries Iran’s pre-revolution national flag in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. Iran has been rocked by widespread protests against economic hardships and the hardline theocratic government. President Trump has threatened to intervene militarily in the country to safeguard protesters against government violence aimed at suppressing the demonstrations.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley
A demonstrator coming from the vicinity of the White House carries Iran’s pre-revolution national flag in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. Iran has been rocked by widespread protests against economic hardships and the hardline theocratic government. President Trump has threatened to intervene militarily in the country to safeguard protesters against government violence aimed at suppressing the demonstrations.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley
A demonstrator coming from the vicinity of the White House carries Iran’s pre-revolution national flag in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. Iran has been rocked by widespread protests against economic hardships and the hardline theocratic government. President Trump has threatened to intervene militarily in the country to safeguard protesters against government violence aimed at suppressing the demonstrations.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley

Then there is Ukraine. There, we have our supposed peacemaker president claiming to be working to end the war of aggression that Russia started by invading its neighbor, but Trump, in the same breath, is threatening to acquire Denmark’s Greenland territory using exactly the method by which Russia’s Vladimir Putin seeks to obtain eastern Ukraine: violent and illegal seizure.

I have a theory about this Greenland campaign: For Trump and his white-supremacist cabal, the contiguous parts of the U.S. have become frighteningly polluted with brown and black people. One solution is to obtain a territory in Europe to establish a racial Eden, an elite destination for white people only, and even then only white people of suitable ideological purity. After all, in the eyes of white supemacists, a “woke” white person is as undesirable as a black or brown person. The 50,000 or so Inuit people of Greenland would not constitute a problem. After all, neither did Native Americans, who were eliminated or displaced and corralled as European Americans pursued their “manifest destiny” in westward expansion here.

The effort to take Greenland threatens to sever the U.S. from its NATO security partners and from its commercial and civilizational partners in the European Union. It raises the prospect of NATO’s European members, and perhaps NATO member Canada here in North America, rallying to defend Denmark and Greenland militarily against the aggression of fellow NATO member the United States. That would be the end of NATO as constituted and purposed since its formation after World War II. Trump would shed no tears over a breakup of NATO, and Putin would be delighted by it.

Here I return to a theme that I continue to hammer: white supremacy. I believe that Trump sees a Russia with Putin’s values as a necessary partner to a U.S. with Trump’s values in a global, fascist, white-supremacist axis. That axis encompasses Europe’s entire far-right white-purity enterprise stretching from the United Kingdom in the west to the farthest eastern reaches of Russia. And, of course, it includes the supposedly imperiled and dispossessed Boers of South Africa.

The surge in worldwide migration that has come with economic globalization has triggered pushback in countries around the world, but the rejection of the migrant outsider — often a dark-skinned Muslim — has been especially harsh in Europe. That is the tune that Donald Trump sings, demonizing brown-skinned migrants in the U.S. as polluting American blood and society with the ways and values of their “shithole countries” while he pines for the U.S. to attract more Scandinavians as immigrants.

If Trump is burning through the U.S.’s goodwill abroad with hostility and a bizarre tariff policy targeting even long-standing friends, for most Americans he has absolutely no personal goodwill to spend here at home. Trump and his administration are deeply despised across this country, and the hatred is growing. Even elements of his notoriously faithful base are beginning to question their religion. More and more of his base sees him as governing not for the people’s interest but for his people’s interest. Most Americans simply want him gone — whether by impeachment and eventual imprisonment or by illness or death of natural causes. They are sick of his chaos, his bloated and festering ego, his divisiveness.

Protesters head away from the headquarters of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the end of a n hours-long demonstration and during biting cold in Southwest Washington, D.C., on the afternoon of Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley
A message for President Trump from the last protester to leave a rally outside the headquarters of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at 500 12th Street SW in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley
Law enforcement officers adjust crowd-control barriers outside ICE headquarters in Southwest Washington after the departure of protesters on the afternoon of Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. A strong wind, seen here buffeting police caution tape, caused the feel-like temperature to drop so painfully low that it may have contributed to the breakup of the protest.
Photo by Gilbert Dunkley

Increasingly, Americans are appalled at Trump’s misuse of the Department of Justice to persecute his political enemies or any significant figure who stands in his way. This is a man who claimed that the Biden Justice Department had been weaponized against him, but nothing that happened under Biden compares to the excesses of the Trump Justice Department. (In my view, the prosecution of Trump by the Biden Justice Department was entirely right and proper.) Trump has fired U.S. attorneys (whom he himself appointed) because their judgment led them to defy his desires and has improperly substituted handpicked stooges who have gone on to be disqualified or to see their partisan prosecutions rebuffed by grand juries and federal judges. Trump’s Justice Department is has become the very word he used to describe those countries he so profanely dismissed.

After instigating government legal action against Letitia James, Lisa Cook, John Bolton and James Comey, Trump has now sicced his eager-beaver Justice Department head Pam Bondi on the Federal Reserve because he wants to get rid of Fed Chair Jerome Powell. In less than one year in office for a second term, Trump has corrupted the Department of Justice more deeply than I think most Americans could have imagined could happen.

And now we have an aggressive expansion of two federal police forces: Immigration and Customs Enforcement; and Customs and Border Protection. It occurs to me that most of the people becoming law enforcement officers in these two agencies today under Donald Trump may be of a mindset like Trump’s: aggressively racist. After all, they must know what team they are joining. And they will get to go hunting throughout the country while masked. These two police agencies worry me inordinately. They appear to me to have the ubiquity and the mindset to be Trump’s own Geheime Staatspolizei in this do-or-die mid-term election year. My fear is that Trump will try to use them and the National Guard somehow to interfere with the conduct of this year’s elections.

If you think I am having a fever dream, think back to the inconceivable events that came to pass with such ease Jan. 6, 2021. Think of what you know of Donald Trump and his most ardent abettors, the likes of Deputy White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and Russell Vought, the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget. Think of the entire architecture of right-wing white supremacy in this country. None of it has gone away. It waits in the wings to emerge as it did for Jan. 6.

But Trump is not in a strong position. He stands in dire peril, in fact, because with each hand he is holding an unhappy wolf by one ear. One beast is the hound of global alienation, and the other canid is domestic fury over Trump’s crass self-indulgence and his autocratic style of governance. Americans keep telling him that they want no king, and he keeps pressing ahead with what resembles a personal imperial project. He appears to believe that he is safe behind the Secret Service and all the other federal and local law enforcement agencies in Washington. But history shows us repeatedly that when public discontent with a leader reaches a critical mass and the crowds march, even the modern Praetorian Guard melts away and the tyrant falls.

The inconceivable violation that Trump abetted on Jan. 6, 2021, may yet come back to visit him in the very house where he lives.

A few of Trump’s latest travesties

The Resident Evil at the White House desires most earnestly that we citizens of this country pay no attention to his machinations and excesses. And, sadly, some people are indeed blind or indifferent to what the president is doing as he endangers our democracy at home and soils our national name before the world. Trump has made the United States a laughing stock, but he cares not, because, while the world laughs at us and the leader that has afflicted us, that man has been laughing all the way to the cryptocurrency bank.

But not all Americans are silent or indifferent.

Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee have issued a report that starkly lays out the president and his family’s cryptocurrency grift.

On Nov. 24, 2025, Judiciary Committee Democrats published a staff report titled “Trump, Crypto, and a New Age of Corruption.” To be clear, this document is a partisan piece of work. It was not produced by the full Judiciary Committee, which is controlled by Republicans, who are naturally allied to President Donald Trump. But the fact that Judiciary Committee Republicans are not associated with the report is telling: Judiciary Republicans, like most of the rest of the House Republican conference, and indeed the Senate Republican conference, are silent in the face of Donald Trump’s excesses.

Instead of publicly standing up for their party’s supposed traditional values of accountability and governmental restraint, which necessarily would put them in opposition to Trump, House Republicans in increasing numbers are quietly announcing their departure from Congress. By so doing, they are simply passing the baton of complicity to Republicans with fresher legs who are eager to race to Washington to get their share of the glories of the swamp. Those coming to replace worn-out and embarrassed GOP representatives will not be coming to Washington to hold Trump accountable. They are coming here to empower him further in his authoritarian corruption.

And they certainly will not be subjecting Trump and his family to scrutiny in relation to their gobbling up of cryptocurrency billions.

The November report tells a story of two Donald Trumps:

1. First-term Donald did not see his opportunities in cryptocurrency and therefore disparaged and opposed the phenomenon. This is Trump writing on Twitter on July 11, 2019:
“I am not a fan of Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies, which are not money, and whose value is highly volatile and based on thin air. Unregulated Crypto Assets can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity….”

2. Second-term Trump has executed a remarkable turnaround on cryptocurrency, even declaring himself “crypto president,” and enabling his family business, while he is president, to accumulate billions of dollars worth of cryptocurrency assets.

The same Republicans who brayed and carped about President Joe Biden’s supposed financial crookedness are silent in regard to the greedy grifting of their man Piggy. But can one really be surprised at this? Not really. The congressional GOP is a collection of disgusting cowards and hypocrites.

Here is a paragraph from the executive summary of the Judiciary Democrats’ report. Read it and weep for your country:

“In the year since his victory in the 2024 election, Donald Trump’s fortune has expanded monumentally, largely because of his crypto dealings. According to Reuters, the Trump family raked in more than $800 million in income from sales of crypto assets in the first half of 2025 alone.  Although it is difficult to determine the precise value of President Trump’s cryptocurrency holdings, public reports make clear the number is in the billions with some estimates putting the value of the holdings as high as $11.6 billion. He has built this wealth from the Oval Office by steering investment to his family firm, shielding his investors from federal fraud and securities investigations and prosecutions, bilking his political base, and degrading the federal agencies ordinarily responsible for investigating bribery and tracking known bad actors online.”

You can read the report here and download it as a PDF.

***

I believe that every decision and directive that issues from Donald Trump in his capacity as president is colored with deceit and ulterior motives. Why? Because the man is fundamentally twisted and dishonest.

I challenge you to make sense of this next travesty. On Monday, Trump issued a pardon to former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, who last year had begun serving a 45-year sentence in U.S. federal prison after being convicted under the Biden administration of complicity in the trafficking of prodigious quantities of cocaine into the United States. Hernández was extradited to the U.S. in April 2022, as reported in this news release from the Justice Department at the time.

Hernández was convicted in U.S. federal court in New York on March 8, 2024, and was sentenced on June 26, 2024, “to 45 Years in Prison for Conspiring to Distribute More Than 400 Tons of Cocaine and Related Firearms Offenses,” according to the headline of a Justice Department news release.

His pardoning by Trump follows the delivery last week of a letter of appeal written directly to Trump by Hernández and passed to the administration by the indefatigable Roger Stone. In his letter to Trump (reading it at the New York Times requires a subscription), Hernández appealed wonderfully to the devious old paranoiac’s sense of victimhood, persecution and personal greatness:

“Your resilience in the face of relentless political persecution has inspired me deeply. Like you, I sought only to serve my people, to uphold our conservative values while leading unprecedented reforms to make my country stronger and safer. And like you, I was recklessly attacked by radical leftist forces who could not tolerate change, who conspired with drug traffickers and resorted to false accusations, lawfare, and selective justice to destroy what we had achieved and clear the path for the Honduran radical left’s return to power.”

The New York Times gives the following account (reading the Times story requires a subscription) of Trump’s justification of the pardon:

“That was a Biden — horrible witch hunt which was, you know, a lot of people in Honduras asked me to do that and I did it,” he said [to reporters on Tuesday]. “I feel very good about it. If you have some drug dealers in your country and you’re the president, you don’t necessarily put the president in jail for 45 years.”

And previously, over the weekend, Trump had this to say to reporters, according to the Times:

“He was the president of the country, and they basically said he was a drug dealer because he was the president of the country,” Mr. Trump said. “And they said it was a Biden administration setup. And I looked at the facts, and I agreed with them.”

This is the same Donald Trump who is accusing Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro of being a drug dealer and has massed U.S. military assets off the Venezuelan coast and declared on Saturday, he issued this on his platform Truth Social: “To all Airlines, Pilots, Drug Dealers, and Human Traffickers, please consider THE AIRSPACE ABOVE AND SURROUNDING VENEZUELA TO BE CLOSED IN ITS ENTIRETY” (a cryptic non-declaration declaration by my reading).

Trump has freed a man who was indicted and ultimately tried and convicted by a jury of American citizens in federal court in the Southern District of New York. But Trump happens to have long despised that particular U.S. attorney’s office, so by overturning a conviction secured in the hated Southern District under the detested Biden administration, Trump is sticking a finger in the eye of that reviled Southern District office and the similarly scorned Biden-Kamala Harris administration.

The Trump who spoke of the injustice that Hernández supposedly suffered in his drug case is the same Trump who is using the U.S. military to execute alleged drug runners off South America in the Pacific and the Atlantic. No arrests, no due process, no presentation of evidence. No justice. Just summary killings including the now infamous “double tap” execution of survivors of an initial strike on an alleged drug boat. That particular outrage is the subject of discussions of possible war-crimes culpability on the part of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Adm. Frank M. Bradley, the unhappy head of U.S. Special Operations Command. And you may be sure that if this particular case becomes truly troublesome for the administration, Adm. Bradley will find himself swiftly flung under the ever-handy accountability bus.

***

On the day before Thanksgiving, two members of the West Virginia National Guard were shot in downtown D.C. near the White House. Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, who was just 20 years old, subsequently died, and Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, remains hospitalized in D.C. The suspect in the shooting is an Afghan national, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, who CBS News reports “entered the U.S. in 2021 as part of the Biden-era Operation Allies Welcome after the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.” Lakanwal came to the U.S. under Biden, benefiting from that program designed to save the risk of Taliban reprisal such Afghans as had worked alongside U.S. forces during the two-decade, armed occupation of their country by the U.S. And Lakanwal was granted asylum in the U.S. this year under the Trump administration. He is facing multiple charges, including first-degree murder, and the federal death penalty is on the table.

One of Trump’s responses to the shooting has moved a tragic and sad case at least a little distance into the territory of farce. Immediately after the shooting of the two National Guard members, Trump ordered that 500 additional Guard troops be brought to D.C. to walk the streets of the capital, as the initial 2,000-plus Guard personnel had been doing. Before the shooting, many, but not all, of the Guard members deployed in the city had carried firearms. Now the Pentagon says all will be armed.

Cast your mind back to Trump’s justification for deploying National Guard troops on the streets of D.C. late in the summer. A young member of staff of Elon Musk’s DOGE entity had been assaulted by a mob of teenage predators on a street in D.C. Furious, Trump declared a one-month crime emergency and deployed the National Guard and police from a string of federal agencies (and immigration agents, naturally) to back up the D.C. police to address street crime. When the crime emergency expired, law enforcement officers from various federal agencies returned to their home agencies, but Trump kept the National Guard tramping the streets of D.C. to buttress the city’s police in their fight against street crime.

But now, after the shooting of those two National Guard members, D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department is providing one police officer apiece to accompany the little knots of Guard troops that continue to walk the city’s streets. This is a puzzle to me. The Guard came here to support the police, but the police are now guarding the Guard. And what is more, the shooting of those two Guard members had nothing to do with D.C. street crime. Lakanwal, the accused, allegedly carried out his attack after driving to D.C. all the way from Bellingham, Wash., which is on the opposite side of the country.

I say again that the shooting was not the product of D.C. street crime, but Trump is boosting the number of Guard troops in the city, where they were never needed or welcomed in the first place; all will now be armed; and city police officers are being pulled off their regular tasks of serving Washingtonians to walk the streets with Guard members to help them protect themselves from … what exactly?

Help me, please. Make this make sense to me.