It’s
a question that needs to be asked.
At the moment, it looks to me as if it is preordained for Killary Clinton to become president and less likely that Trump will be allowed to be voted into office
Will
Barack Obama Try To Stay In Office If Donald Trump Wins The Election?
By
Michael Snyder
August
4th, 2016
If
Donald Trump wins in November, will Barack Obama leave office and
hand over power in an orderly fashion? Normally we would not even
have to ask such a question, but these are not normal times. This
week, Obama publicly stated that Trump “is
unfit to serve as President”
and that he is “woefully
unprepared to do this job“.
In addition, he told the press that Trump “doesn’t have the
judgment, the temperament, the understanding to occupy the most
powerful position in the world.” If Obama really believes those
things are true, would he really just stand aside and hand the keys
to the White House to Trump?
Never
before have I ever heard a sitting president claim that one of the
major party candidates could not function as president. But that is
what Obama has just done. The following is an excerpt from a
transcript of remarks made by Obama earlier this week that
comes directly
from the official White House website.
I have highlighted certain phrases in bold text, because I want you
to truly consider the implications of what he is saying here…
But there have been Republican Presidents with whom I disagreed with, but I didn’t have a doubt that they could function as President. I think I was right, and Mitt Romney and John McCain were wrong on certain policy issues, but I never thought that they couldn’t do the job. And had they won, I would have been disappointed, but I would have said to all Americans they are — this is our President, and I know they’re going to abide by certain norms and rules and common sense, will observe basic decency, will have enough knowledge about economic policy and foreign policy and our constitutional traditions and rule of law that our government will work, and then we’ll compete four years from now to try to win an election.
But that’s not the situation here. And that’s not just my opinion; that is the opinion of many prominent Republicans.There has to come a point at which you say, enough.
Earlier
today, I came across an outstanding article by
Joseph Farah of WND in
which he summarized the claims that Obama was making against Trump…
- He said Trump would not abide by “norms and rules and common sense.”
- He questioned whether he would “observe basic decency” should he reach the Oval Office.
- He said he would have been disappointed to lose the elections of 2008 and 2012, but never doubted whether his rivals in those elections, John McCain and Mitt Romney, could function as president or had the knowledge to make government work. “That’s not the situation here,” he added.
- He added Trump “doesn’t have the judgment, the temperament, the understanding, to occupy the most powerful position in the world.”
- He said he was “woefully unprepared to do this job.”
- Obama said Trump lacked knowledge about Europe, the Middle East and other parts of Asia.
This
is some extremely strong language, and I truly wish one of the
reporters at the press conference would have asked one incredibly
important follow up question.
Will
Barack Obama try to stay in office if Donald Trump wins the election?
If no one else will ask the question, I will: “Mr. President, if Donald Trump wins the election to become the next president of the United States, will you willingly and peacefully leave office and cooperate fully with the transition of power the way all of your predecessors in the White House have done in the past?”
It’s a simple question that needs to be asked and answered – given Obama’s highly inflammatory rhetoric over the last week.
Like
Farah, I believe that it is a fair question.
If
Barack Obama truly believes all of the things he said about Donald
Trump, does he also believe that he has a responsibility to keep
Donald Trump from taking office?
Absent
a major national emergency of some sort, this would be very difficult
for Obama to do. But if there were some sort of enormous national
crisis between now and next January, Barack Obama could potentially
employ some of the extraordinary emergency powers that have been
endowed on the office of the president over the past several decades.
There
is not a single statute, regulation, executive order or presidential
directive that contains all of the powers that a president would
possess during a major national emergency. Rather, these powers have
been layered on top of one another for a very long period of time,
and they come from literally dozens of different laws, regulations,
court decisions, executive orders and presidential directives.
One
document that I would refer you to is National
Security Presidential Directive 51 which
was put into effect during the Bush administration. It is all about
“national continuity policy” and it defines a “catastrophic
emergency” as “any incident, regardless of location, that results
in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption
severely affecting the U.S. population, infrastructure, environment,
economy, or government functions”.
In
such a scenario, the president would have almost unlimited power, and
he would wield enormously powerful executive orders such
as this one.
If there was a big enough emergency, the president would potentially
be able to declare martial law, suspend elections and essentially
become a dictator.
Let
us hope that we never see such a thing play out in the United States
of America.
For
the moment, there is not much of a threat that Obama will try to stop
Trump from taking office because Hillary Clinton has jumped out to
a huge lead in the latest McClatchy-Marist poll…
The former secretary of State gained ground in the McClatchy-Marist poll, and Trump lost support. Clinton had the support of 48% of those surveyed, and Trump had 33%. Last month, Clinton had 42% while Trump had 33%.
When third-party candidates are included, Clinton’s lead held strong. She had 45%, and Trump had 31%, Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson had 10% and Green Party candidate Jill Stein had 6%.
And
the latest NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll found
that Clinton is leading Trump by a 47 percent to 38 percent margin.
One
thing that I found interesting about both of these polls is that they
show two third party candidates gaining ground. The NBC
News/Wall Street Journal pollhad
Gary Johnson with 10 percent support and Jill Stein at five percent.
Jill
Stein is still behind Johnson at this point, but she is potentially
the much stronger candidate. If she starts to catch fire with Bernie
Sanders supporters, she could possibly even hit the 15 percent
threshold for being invited to participate in the upcoming
presidential debates.
And
Donald Trump certainly needs something to change about this race,
because right now he is really struggling.
But
there is a long way to go until November, and as we have seen,
anything is likely to happen in this election cycle.
No worries,
ReplyDeleteClinton is in. The fixers will see to that. Look at how Bernie Sanders was just swept aside. Also, we citizens of the USA don't care if our government officials are criminals or not. None of the wikileaks stuff is going to to anywhere. Further, we don't give a s**t if our election system is as transparent as a black hole.RE: Florida 2000 & Ohio 2004. Same deal - Trump will soon be a historical footnote.
The best part for us 'mericuns, is that we will get exactly the administration that we deserve. My sincerest apologies to the rest of the world, who are going to get something which they have done nothing to deserve.