Some of the strongest voices standing up to MAGA “Trumpism” are current and former Republicans: George Will, Max Boot, David Frum, Adam Kinzinger, Liz Cheney, Mitt Romney, William Kristol, Nicolle Wallace, Michael Steele, Joe Scarborough, Tim Miller, and Stuart Stevens.
Stevens –– one of the founders of the Lincoln Project along with Rick Wilson, George Conway , and Steve Schmidt, and others –– is a Paul Revere figure among those strong voices.
Published a year before that last election, Stevens warned of his party’s fast-moving slide toward autocracy in “The Conspiracy to End America: Five Ways My Old Party Is Driving Democracy Away” (Twelve, Hachette Book Group, 2023). The author is a former chief Republican strategist. He worked on campaigns for prominent republicans including Bob Dole and Mitt Romney and helped elect George W. Bush.
In a blurb for this eye-opening book, journalist and author James Fallows writes, “Stuart Stevens has been everywhere and seen everything, and he shares what he has learned in concise, vivid prose. His book is urgent but not despairing. It is deadly serious but frequently funny. It offers the big picture…”
Here is how Stevens presents the big picture.
“While it is difficult to attribute any deliberate or methodical plan to Donald Trump, whose mind operates like an old-fashioned pinball machine on tilt-bouncing from one inchoate impulse to another—his basic anti-democratic, Strongman instincts have crushed dissent in the Republican Party, empowering the underlying authoritarian impulses within the party. A once-center-right political party with core ideological principles is now marching toward the formation of an autocratic state.”
The big picture includes obvious racism and misogyny in MAGA’s core constituency that would reject a woman of color, Vice President Kamala Harris, from becoming president.
“…the xenophobia and racism that appealed to Trump voters was far more motivating to Republican voters than the small government, low taxes, constitutionally conservative so-called "values" they insisted were the true core of the Republican Party. The absurdity of their deceit could not have been more glaringly obvious. Their commitment to their deeply held beliefs was so weak that they now supported a man who bragged he was "the king of debt," refused to release his tax returns to show he even paid taxes, and his Muslim ban was a religious test that was a clear violation of Article VI of the Constitution that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States." They didn't care about anything but remaining in power. The Republican Party leadership was a collection of liars and frauds who thought they could use Trump while controlling him.”
Ouch.
Stevens saw (and foresaw an even greater) corruption by Trump and his family –– and the acceptance by the cult followers of grift and greed.
“Trump’s base of supporters didn’t care if he used his office to enrich himself and his family because if being rich was a qualification for office, getting richer only proved you were more qualified,” he writes.
A party that once stood for “states’ rights” and against a centralized government under a single authority, now supports the opposite. How has the Republican Party strayed? Lincoln emancipated slaves and united the nation; Teddy Roosevelt fought against big money in politics; Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency and achieved rapprochement with China; and the Bushes and Reagan welcomed immigration. All would be considered “woke” or supporters of DEI (diversity, equity/equality, inclusion) by MAGA Republicans today.
“Once a political party in a democratic system abandons any moral or ideological rationale for its existence, it is on the road to autocracy.”
Stevens offers these nuggets of wisdom about the current downhill road to autocracy, from the Big Lie of election fraud to greater violence against democratic institutions:
- “There’s always been too much money in American politics. No other Western democracy allows vast sums of money to pollute its electoral system.”
- “No anti-democratic movement becomes more democratic once in power.”
- “The last time Americans couldn’t agree on who was a legal president was in 1861.”
- “Two truths remain constant … if there is to be a democracy, someone must be willing to lose … (and) no one tries to change the rules…”
- “The truth is that no one in the Republican Party actually believes there is widespread (voting) fraud, but it is a convenient cover story for the destruction of democracy.”
- “The success Republicans have had gerrymandering congressional districts is a supercharged propellant for minority rule.”
- “The Trump loyalist who stormed the Capitol have broken faith with the institution of American democracy.” [ written before Trump pardoned them and is now attempting to pay J6ers reparations]
- “You do not assault the Capitol unless you believe the democratic process has failed and must end. You do not refuse to certify the election of the candidate who received more votes than any presidential candidate in U.S. history if you respect the will of the people, an essential element for any democracy to survive.”
- “Violence has become an essential element of the Republican political narrative, signaling to the once fringe militia groups and their sympathizers the they have a place in the party.”
- “The far right is obsessed with guns and violence because they reject … the essence of a shared community.”
- “The Trump announcement at Waco was a declaration of war against American democracy made to a well-armed crowd eager to be his soldiers.”
- “If white evangelicals love Trump and black evangelicals hate him, is this about religion or race? And like all of Trump’s appeals, it is about race.”
- “In healthy democracies the heads of state act as a calming influence, reassuring citizens that their safety is protected by government policies and institutions of the state. Dictators act in exactly the opposite manner.”
Trump and his chosen loyalists have fast-laned the U.S. military on the highway to autocracy and Christian Nationalism/Supremacy by using troops as backdrops at Republican rallies, promoting protestant Christianity in the ranks, and restricting balanced media and independent thinking at the Pentagon.
Stevens notes:
“People in the armed forces are fond of the term ‘combined arms maneuver.’ The U.S. Army's Military Review defines it as "the application of the elements of combat power in a complementary and reinforcing manner to achieve physical, temporal, or psychological advantages over the enemy to preserve freedom of action and exploit success.’ This is exactly how Republican efforts to shape elections should be perceived. The Republicans have successfully undertaken ‘complementary and reinforcing’ efforts to control legislatures and appoint conservative judges at every level for decades.”
In Part I of our review of “The Conspiracy to End Autocracy,” we pulled quotes from various authors cited by Stevens.
One of the authors Stevens relies on to make his point is “Surviving Autocracy’s” Masha Gesson who warns, “Autocrats declare their intentions early on. We disbelieve or ignore them at our peril.” Gesson adds about President Trump, “He was probably the first major party nominee who ran not for president but for autocrat. And he won.”
Trump won again in 2024, despite Stevens’s warning a year earlier.
Trump was elected, in part, because of the support of Republicans who were former “never-Trumpers” –– especially in the immediate aftermath of January 6, 2021 –– but who then pinballed back as loyal supporters and enablers: J.D. Vance (who called Trump “America’s Hitler”), Marco Rubio (who referred to Trump as a “con man”), Ted Cruz (who said Trump was “utterly amoral”), and Lindsey Graham (who once called Trump a "race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot”).
Other formerly ardent supporters, however, have turned away from the MAGA leader’s autocracy movement: Marjorie Taylor Green, Tucker Carlson, Chris Christie, Megyn Kelly, Sohrab Ahmari, Candace Owens, Alex Jones, Shawn Ryan, Theo Von, and Joe Rogan.
Once afraid of Trump and his followers, they are joining the ranks of those opposed to tearing down the Constitution and democracy.