This piece had me spell bound until I got through about 75% of it. Then I determined the writer was paranoid. The remedies he proposes for the Republican Party are laughable, as is his disappointment in Romney and Sasse for continuing to support the filibuster.
Regardless of whether you love or hate Trump, I think you'll find this entertaining and thought provoking. It's being called one of the best editorials of the year.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...tional-crisis/
An excerpt, to whet your appetite,
The stage is thus being set for chaos (after the 2024 election). Imagine weeks of competing mass protests across multiple states as lawmakers from both parties claim victory and charge the other with unconstitutional efforts to take power. Partisans on both sides are likely to be better armed and more willing to inflict harm than they were in 2020. Would governors call out the National Guard? Would President Biden nationalize the Guard and place it under his control, invoke the Insurrection Act, and send troops into Pennsylvania or Texas or Wisconsin to quell violent protests? Deploying federal power in the states would be decried as tyranny. Biden would find himself where other presidents have been — where Andrew Jackson was during the nullification crisis, or where Abraham Lincoln was after the South seceded — navigating without rules or precedents, making his own judgments about what constitutional powers he does and doesn’t have.
Today’s arguments over the filibuster will seem quaint in three years if the American political system enters a crisis for which the Constitution offers no remedy.