Four years ago this month, as then-President Barack Obama prepared to exit the White House, he held a press conference in which he explained his vision of occasional political intervention.
“There’s a difference,” the outgoing president explained, “between that normal functioning of politics and certain issues or certain moments where I think our core values may be at stake.”
As regular readers know, I’ve been keeping a casual tally of such instances, one of which arose yesterday. The New York Times reported:
Former president Barack Obama cast Tuesday’s runoff elections in Georgia as an existential struggle for core democratic institutions, hours after a recording was made public of President Trump pressuring an official of the state to “find” enough votes to overturn his loss there. “Tomorrow is Election Day in Georgia and the stakes could not be higher,” the former president wrote on Twitter on Monday afternoon. “We’re seeing how far some will go to retain power and threaten the fundamental principles of our democracy. But our democracy isn’t about any individual, even a president — it’s about you.”
The former president wasn’t explicit when mentioning “how far some will go to retain power,” but the Times’ report added that a source close to Obama was, in fact, referring to Trump’s scandalous phone meeting with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R), in which the outgoing president pressured the state official to overturn election results Trump doesn’t like.
The next question, of course, is what current officials are prepared to do when confronted with a president “threatening the fundamental principles of our democracy.”
A variety of Democratic members of Congress have contacted the FBI and other agencies, seeking an investigation into Trump’s misconduct. But those same members also have the authority to take steps of their own. Rep. Hank Johnson (R-Ga.), for example, is moving forward with plans for a possible congressional censure of Trump.









