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| Murphy |
Connecticut Democrat U.S. Senator Chris Murphy, NBC tells us, “is donating $100,000 from his political fund to the progressive organizing group Indivisible — the latest in a series of donations he says total nearly $1 million to grassroots groups across the country taking on the Trump administration. Among the “grassroots” agitprop groups Murphy is financing from his overflowing campaign donations are leftist agitators such as Indivisible, “the progressive-aligned nonprofit group that has been holding ‘No Kings’ rallies across the country to protest Trump,” according to NBC.
So then, why is Murphy diverting his own excess campaign
funds to such groups?
Murphy ‘splained himself to NBC reporters Julie Tsirkin and
Ben Kamisar.
Murphy “declared in an interview that the usual way
politicians raise money — stockpiling assets in the years before they’re on the
ballot again — doesn’t meet the moment for the Democratic Party, which is
trying to mobilize against President Donald Trump and Republicans. And he
claimed that the stakes of this political moment are about democracy itself.
There are several things wrong with Murphy’s rational.
Despite the scare tactics of Indivisible’s “No Kings” campaign, the 22nd
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution limits presidential campaigns to eight
years. That amendment was passed in 1947 by a U.S. Congress that feared an
additional fifth term in office for President Franklin Roosevelt might send a
message that unlimited terms in office would introduce executive tyranny into a
Republic than had cast off the imperial ambitions of King George of Merry
England. Unfortunately, some people think, the Congress limited its measure
only to presidents and not legislators. It is true that Trump amusingly
suggested a third term for himself. Most rational commentators supposed he was
pulling the ears of a donkey that, for campaign purposes, had been braying for
half a dozen years that Trump was a tyrant in the fashion of FDR.
“There’s something magic that happens when millions of
people are mobilized all around the country,” Murphy confided to NBC. “It just
throws sand in the gears of an effort to try to convert a democracy to
something very different… We may not have another election, at least a free and
fair election, if we don’t stop this slide away from free speech and democracy
quickly. And what we know from history is that the only way to stop a, you
know, would-be tyrant from cratering, from destroying a democracy is mass
mobilization.”
The response to Murphy’s fantasy from White House
spokesperson Abigail Jackson was nearly instantaneous. "Right before
Charlie Kirk’s assassination,” Jackson mused, “Chris Murphy told his supporters
they were in a 'war' and needed to do 'whatever is necessary' to win. In the
wake of radical left-wing violence, Murphy has doubled down by peddling insane
conspiracy theories like this one."
Murphy offered mild criticism of other Democrats who are
unwilling to follow his lead.
“The Democratic Party,
he pointed out, “is not popular today, and so that means that the DNC is going
to have trouble raising money for the foreseeable future. So we can complain
about that, or we can do something about it. There are individual Democratic
leaders who have the ability to raise a lot of money right now because we have
credibility, and so I think that means we have an obligation to take our
ability to raise resources and not just use it to fill our coffers and show
personal future political strength, but to put it on the ground right now. If
20 or 30 major Democratic leaders started putting this kind of money on the
ground, we could fund something pretty significant.”
Credibility and popularity, like love and marriage, go
together, especially in non-fascist governments such as our constitutional
republic.
Murphy, people on both sides of the political aisle may
agree, has been a money maker for Democrats. In the past, Democrat incumbents
in safe districts have generated excessive campaign contributions and plowed
their assets into party formation. Rosa DeLauro in Connecticut’s 3rd
District has been famous for flushing her sizable excess campaign contributions
into state Democrat Party coffers; ditto John Larson in the state’s 1st
District.
Murphy is here blazing a new path the purpose of which
appears to be to prevent Trump from becoming a tyrant who may, like FDR, serve
more than two terms – a fool’s errand. There are a little more than 1,200 days
left in the Trump presidency, and the clock is ticking.
Democrats are hoping their implausible rhetoric will erase
in the public mind a recent history that does not politically stand them in good
stead. That history – not ancient – includes two assassination attempts on
Trump, two failed attempts to remove him from office, a fake “dossier”
submitted to a FISA court that launched hundreds of fake headlines suggesting
that Trump was the tool of Russian Stalinist Vladimir Putin, the destructor-elect
of Ukraine, and the imputation that Trump will extend his “tyranny” past two
terms in office. In a few months, time will accomplish what Murphy has not.
Unless Democrats soon begin to focus on workable policies and stop supporting real enemies of the Republic such as Zohran Mamdani, the next
Democrat Marxist/Communist mayor of New York City, the future of the Democrat
Party will remain dark.

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