In other words, to remove the president using the impeachment process, the forces of sanity would need to muster a two-thirds majority in the Senate. To remove the president under the 25th Amendment, they would need to do it inĀ bothĀ houses.
Donāt kid yourself, folks: There is no magic bullet here. There is no constitutional magic bullet. There is no investigative or prosecutorial magic bulletāno Robert Mueller or Jack Smith. There is no combination of protests and elections or lobbying that can make this problem go away quickly.
There is, instead, a long hard slog ahead of usāa long hard slog of elections, advocacy, protest, litigation, and people fighting for their rights.
And there is a long hard slog ahead of Europe too in handling the disaster the United States has unleashed on the world. Because that is what managing a deranged person is like.
⦠This was long before George Conway wroteĀ his famous Atlantic article about Trumpās malignant narcissism. Trumpās mental health was not a subject it was considered appropriate to discussāat least not in a serious way, and Iām not a clinician, andĀ LawfareĀ is not a medical or psychological journal. And yet, even thenāeight months before he was elected the first timeāthere was āthe small matter of Trumpāsāthereās no polite way to say thisāevident clinical symptoms. Iām not a psychologist qualified to make a diagnosis, but it simply has to be significant that itās hard to have a serious conversation about Trump without using words like egomania, grandiosity, or narcissism.ā
There was no escaping it. He was derangedāgrandiose, egomaniacal, narcissistic, the sort of man who would get obsessed with acquiring Greenland and blow up Americaās most sacred international commitments to get it done. The sort of man who would respond to not getting the Nobel Peace Prize by declaring he was no longer solely interested in peace. The sort of man who would take the medal from its rightful winner and feel no shame at the theft.



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