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In the wake of last week's terrifying news of the New York Times/Siena College polls showing Donald Trump beating President Joe Biden in must-win battleground states, keep in mind two words and spread them: Insurrection Act.
It's been 31 years since a president last invoked the act and dispatched troops domestically to enforce federal law. That's the longest stretch of nonuse in the Insurrection Act's roughly 240-year history, befitting the disquieting power it confers. Back then, President George H.W. Bush sent the military, at the request of California Gov. Pete Wilson, to quell the 1992 riots in Los Angeles after four police officers were acquitted for their horrific, video-recorded beating of Rodney King.
But if Trump is re-elected, the law's next invocation could well come soon, on Jan. 20, 2025 — Inauguration Day. You've been warned.
Anticipating widespread protests against his second term, Trump and allies reportedly are drafting plans to invoke the Insurrection Act in his first hours back in the White House — thereby confirming the expected protesters' likely point: Trump is a danger to liberty and constitutional governance.
And that's just one of many MAGA plans in the works, as the Washington Post reported last week, all aimed at making good on Trump's central promise of the 2024 campaign: "retribution." (A third word to remember, and repeat.)
According to the Post, Trump allies — purported intellectuals and Cabinet wannabes in far-right think tanks — are "mapping out specific plans for using the federal government to punish [his] critics and opponents," even naming individuals to be investigated and prosecuted. For what, you ask. TBD.