December 27, 2025

The Petty Revenge of a Soon-to-Be-Ex-President

112220-10-Politics
The Petty Revenge of a Soon-to-Be-Ex-President

The Petty Revenge of a Soon-to-Be-Ex-President
Trump arrives to golf at Trump National Golf Club on Saturday, November 14, 2020 in Sterling, VA. (Photo: Al Drago for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

With their pitiful plots to overthrow election results, Trump and the GOP are the lowest.


The Petty Revenge of a Soon-to-Be-Ex-President

By Michael Winship


In Mary L. Trumpโ€™s book about her family, Too Much and Never Enough, thereโ€™s a moment referred to in the index as the โ€œmashed potatoes incident.โ€

Apparently, young Donald was a major pill almost from birth, undisciplined, rude and nasty to his siblings and his mother. One night at dinner, he was, as usual, picking on his younger brother Robert. He had the boy in tears. Older brother Fred, Jr., then 14, intervened.

โ€œRobertโ€™s crying and Donaldโ€™s needling became too much,โ€ Mary Trump writes, โ€œand in a moment of improvised expedience that would become family legend, Freddy picked up the first thing at hand that wouldnโ€™t cause any real damage: the bowl of mashed potatoes.

Everybody laughed and they couldnโ€™t stop laughing. And they were laughing at Donald. It was the first time Donald had been humiliated by someone he even then believed to be beneath himโ€ฆ From then on, he would wield the weapon, never be at the sharp end of it.

On November 3, a majority of voters dumped mashed potatoes on Donald Trumpโ€™s head and heโ€™s still screaming from the injustice of it all. Despite overwhelming evidence that he lost the election, he continues to falsely bellow โ€œFraud!โ€ via his Twitter feed and pursues one frivolous lawsuit after another to challenge the result, all to no avail. So far. (As of this writing, he and the Republican Party were 0-33.)

Meanwhile, he fired Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, installed Trump loyalists at the Pentagon, and terminated Chris Krebs, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), who had the audacity to do an exemplary job keeping this yearโ€™s voting free and clear of  hacking and other interference. โ€œIn every case of which we are aware,โ€ Krebs had announced, โ€œthese claims either have been unsubstantiated or are technically incoherentโ€โ€” flying in the face of Trumpโ€™s post-election attempts to flood the zone and work the refs with wild-eyed lies and conspiracy theories.

Judges are viewing his legal teamโ€™s frantic fantasies with derision and contempt and lawyers have been dropping the Trump campaign like the proverbial hot un-mashed potato it is to the extent that clown prince Rudy Giuliani is now heading up the legal effort.

Iโ€™m hard-pressed to immediately come up with someone who needs to be twelve-stepped more than our cityโ€™s former mayor. Rudy, who has not argued before a federal court in 28 years, appeared in one on Tuesday to argue on behalf of a case claiming voting irregularities in four Pennsylvania counties.

โ€œThe Trump campaign came in through Mr. Giuliani asserting a fantasy world,โ€ Mark Aronchick, attorney for the counties, told MSNBCโ€™s Chris Hayes. โ€œIt was a case that somehow involves 11 different states in a gigantic conspiracy with the biggest cities in the United States all joining in to somehow manufacture votes and change mail-in ballots, and somehow throw the election to Joe Biden. And I sat there dumbfounded because the story that was presented by Mr. Giuliani bore no relationship to the actual complaint in the caseโ€ฆ Nothing that they said actually makes sense.”

To which the perplexed judge replied, โ€œAt bottom, youโ€™re asking this court to invalidate some 6.8 million votes thereby disenfranchising every single voter in the commonwealth. Can you tell me how this result could possibly be justified?โ€

None of this has deterred the Trump campaign and the GOP itself from trying to disenfranchise voters and in particular, voters of color. Republican interest in protecting the vote or preserving democracy is virtually non-existent. South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham in particular seems to have shown a willingness to subvert the democratic process, allegedly approaching Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger to suggest that he โ€œlook hard and see how many ballots you could throw out.โ€ That much of their focus seems to be on voters in Black communities tells you all you need to know.

As reported in The Washington Post Wednesday night, one of Trumpโ€™s latest ploys, with the help of Giuliani, is to convince Republican legislators in key states to stall certification of the election and have GOP-chosen electors disrupt the Electoral College come December.

โ€œBut that outcome appears impossible,โ€ the Post notes. โ€œIt is against the law in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin law gives no role to the legislature in choosing presidential electors, and there is little public will in other states to pursue such a path.

Behind the thin legal gambit is what several Trump advisers say is his real goal: sowing doubt in Bidenโ€™s victory with the presidentโ€™s most ardent supporters and keeping alive his prospects for another presidential run in 2024.

Further, the Associated Press reported Thursday morning, โ€œGetting nowhere in the courts, President Donald Trumpโ€™s scattershot effort to overturn President-elect Joe Bidenโ€™s victory is shifting toward obscure election boards that certify the vote as Trump and his allies seek to upend the electoral process, sow chaos and perpetuate unsubstantiated doubts about the count.โ€ Hence the craziness among Republican canvassers in Wayne County (Detroit), Michigan and in Arizona and other states.

Ugh on about 16 different levels. Itโ€™s painfully clear that the next two months before Joe Bidenโ€™s swearing-in will be all about Trumpโ€™s petty vengeance and the Republicans building on resentments. Given what Trumpโ€™s been up to since Election Day (and his sordid history embracing birtherism and other canards), it feels as if these eight weeks will be a concentrated Readerโ€™s Digest version of his entire administration, fueled with spittle, bile, ignorance and cupidity.

As insane and silly as it all seems, we cannot drop our guard for an instant. Weโ€™ll need to remain vigilant; they are doing everything they can, no matter how illegal and repugnant, to stay in power. When they finally are forced to vacate, theyโ€™ll leave behind a scorched earth the new Biden administration will struggle to coax back to life.

Trump never has been what youโ€™d call a hands-on presidentโ€”unless it served his self-interest or desire to create havoc. But now, as a result of his monumental, post-election petulance, even less than usual is getting doneโ€”except for his election chicanery (and the announcement of major troop withdrawals in Afghanistan and Iraq with more anticipated in Germany and South Korea, a potentially disastrous move).

Congress is hamstrung, unable to pass a new Covid-19 relief bill, and with a fully tested vaccine still weeks away, the deadly virus has exploded across the country more severely and widely than ever before, further proof of just how badly Trump has handled this disaster from the start. Now he peevishly refuses to allow the Biden transition team to work with the White House coronavirus task forceโ€”while simultaneously denying the president-elect access to national security briefings. This is graceless and stupid, verging on the traitorous.

So far, most of his colleagues at the White House and on Capitol Hill continue to coddle the infantile behavior of the president, perhaps hopeful that his legal eagles accidentally will stumble into some mass plot that upturns the results. Keep in mind that there are motives behind this effort that go beyond Trumpโ€™s whining Baby Herman actโ€”he and the party are raising significant amounts of money for his so-called defense fund. And Republicans leaders continue to placate their nutty boss, hoping heโ€™ll campaign for the two GOP U.S. Senate candidates in Georgiaโ€™s January 5 runoff and allow them to hold onto  the Senate majority.

As childish as Trumpsโ€™ tantrums are, as mentioned, heโ€™s also hard at work using the attacks to keep his base in line for a 2024 candidacyโ€”all (gulp) 73 million of them. There will be a huge advance for a memoir for sure, and his own TV network, maybe a radio talk show. Perhaps his pal Mark Burnett will come up with a new reality game show, a cross between โ€œThe Apprenticeโ€ and โ€œDancing with the Stars.โ€ Trump will serve as sole judge, kneecapping with a baseball bat the contestants he just doesnโ€™t like.

Also part of his rage, of course, is the knowledge that even if he pardons himself or a freshly sworn-in temporary President Pence does it for him right before Bidenโ€™s inauguration, state and local lawsuits are out there waiting for Trump, and no presidential pardon can protect him unless, foolishly, prosecutors decide to drop charges in the name of Americansโ€™ purported need for harmony, peace and a return to normal. Gerald Ford fell for that trick when he pardoned Nixon in 1974; this is no time for Mister Nice Guy.

In the end, Republicans, all youโ€™re doing is delaying the inevitable while grievously damaging the country and its democracy. This isnโ€™t governing, itโ€™s thuggish stalling, damaging the transition by choosing malignant selfishness over patriotism and truth.

And for what? Face it, youโ€™re covering for a psychopath, a petty tyrant with the scruples of a scorpion. Youโ€™ll look swell in the history books kissing the hem of your two-bit Caligula. Please pass the mashed potatoes, thereโ€™s a job to be done.


Published by Common Dreams, 11.19.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.