Trump: The Anti-Lincoln

from the preserving-the-constitution-vs.-destroying-it dept

Saturday, January 3rd, 2026. The President of the United States stood in his private club in Palm Beach, Florida, and announced that America had toppled Venezuela’s government and would now “run” the country indefinitely.

Not from the Oval Office. Not in consultation with Congress. From Mar-a-Lago, in front of gilded chandeliers and club members, Donald Trump pointed to the men standing behind him—his Secretary of State, his Defense Secretary, his Chairman of the Joint Chiefs—and said: “The people standing right behind me, we’re going to be running it.”

Running a nation of thirty million people. Indefinitely. Without congressional authorization. Without a declaration of war. Without even the pretense that constitutional constraints apply.

When asked about the legal basis, Trump cited oil rights he claims were “stolen” from American corporations decades ago. When asked about resistance, he promised a “second wave” of military action. When asked who would govern Venezuela, he gestured at his cabinet and said they would decide.

This is the anti-Lincoln moment. Not because Trump expanded executive power—Lincoln did that too. But because Lincoln used emergency authority to preserve the constitutional framework, while Trump uses it to declare himself outside constitutional constraint entirely.

Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus to save the Union. Donald Trump announced imperial conquest to extract oil. One defended the regime. One destroys it. Trump isn’t like Lincoln. He’s the structural opposite—doing exactly what Lincoln would have fought against.


Lincoln suspended habeas corpus. Expanded executive war powers. Asserted federal authority over states claiming sovereignty. This is historical fact.

But watch what else he did.

He submitted the habeas suspension to Congress for ratification—which they gave. He accepted that courts could review his actions. He ran for re-election during war and accepted he might lose. He yielded power when constitutional process demanded it.

Lincoln’s logic was always this: the constitutional framework faces existential threat from secession, and extraordinary measures to preserve it are justified—within constitutional bounds and subject to eventual constitutional accountability.

The key word is preserve. Lincoln expanded executive power to save the framework that makes constitutional government possible. Secession would have destroyed the Union. No Union, no Constitution. No Constitution, no self-government. The emergency power served constitutional continuation.

And crucially, Lincoln submitted to the framework even while defending it. Congress could check him. Courts could review him. Elections could remove him. His question wasn’t “How do I escape accountability?” It was “How do I preserve the system that holds me accountable?”

That’s emergency power in a constitutional republic. Extraordinary measures, constitutional purpose, ultimate accountability.


Trump’s Imperial Declaration

Trump’s announcement Saturday inverts every principle Lincoln defended.

No Congressional authorization under Article I, Section 8. No declaration of war. No emergency requiring immediate action to prevent attack on American territory or citizens. Just the President deciding to wage war, seize another nation’s government, and announce indefinite occupation.

“Venezuela unilaterally seized and sold American oil, American assets and American platforms,” Trump said from his club. “The socialist regime stole it from us… Now we’re taking it back.”

This isn’t emergency power to preserve constitutional framework. This is imperial conquest announced as resource extraction. This is the President declaring he will “run” a foreign nation to compensate American corporations for assets nationalized decades ago.

The New York Times got it exactly right: the events “evoked memories of a bygone era of gunboat diplomacy, where the U.S. employed its military might to secure territory and resources for its own advantage.”

Trump hung a portrait in the White House featuring himself alongside William McKinley—the president who seized the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. Now he’s acting out McKinley’s imperial playbook, but without even the pretense of Congressional authorization that McKinley obtained.

Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress—not the President—the power to declare war. This isn’t ambiguous. This isn’t a gray area. The Founders explicitly rejected giving war powers to the executive because they had just fought a revolution against monarchical power.

Lincoln understood this. Even while expanding executive authority to suppress rebellion, he sought Congressional authorization, submitted to Congressional oversight, and accepted that courts and elections could check him.

Trump’s position, articulated by his defenders, is different: Congressional authorization is irrelevant when the cause is just. Maduro is evil. Venezuela’s people are suffering. Sometimes you have to crack a few eggs. Constitutional process is pedantry when outcomes are good.

This is not Lincoln’s emergency power. This is Carl Schmitt’s sovereignty: the sovereign is he who decides on the exception. The strong leader acts decisively. Constitutional constraint is obstacle, not obligation. Emergency is permanent condition justifying permanent exception.

Lincoln used emergency power within constitutional framework to preserve that framework from destruction. Trump uses emergency claims to declare himself outside constitutional framework—to wage war, seize governments, and extract resources without Congressional authorization, without declaration of war, without even the pretense that constitutional constraints apply to him.


This isn’t isolated. This is the pattern.

When election results constrain him, he claims fraud, attempts to prevent certification, and incites assault on the Capitol.

When courts rule against him, he calls the judiciary illegitimate and promises to ignore adverse rulings.

When Congress investigates, he refuses subpoenas, claims absolute immunity, and purges inspector generals.

When the Constitution limits war powers, he wages war unilaterally from his private club while his defenders mock proceduralism.

Every emergency claim serves the same purpose: eliminate the constraint. Never preserve the framework. Always escape accountability.

His defenders make it explicit. Marco Rubio, now Secretary of State and National Security Adviser, said of Venezuela’s interim leader: “We think they’re going to have some unique and historic opportunities to do a great service for the country, and we hope that they’ll accept that opportunity.”

Translation: do what we want, or face second-wave military action. This isn’t partnership. This isn’t liberation. This is imperial diktat backed by armada.

Trump himself was clearer: America will extract Venezuela’s oil, and the partnership with the United States will make“the people of Venezuela rich, independent, and safe”—if they comply. If they resist, he warned: “We’re not afraid of boots on the ground.”

This is conquest. Announced from Mar-a-Lago. Without Congressional authorization. In explicit pursuit of seizing another nation’s resources for American corporate benefit.

Lincoln would have recognized this instantly as what he fought against. This is executive power divorced from constitutional constraint. This is sovereignty claiming exception to law itself.


We’re not in normal politics. Normal politics is policy disagreement within shared constitutional framework. Should taxes be higher? How should we conduct foreign policy? What’s the right balance of regulation?

This is regime crisis. One side claims constitutional constraints don’t apply when emergency or good outcomes justify exception. The other side keeps pretending we’re having normal policy debate.

When the President wages war without Congress, that’s not “foreign policy I disagree with.” That’s constitutional violation requiring constitutional response.

When the President announces from his private club that his cabinet will “run” a foreign nation of thirty million people indefinitely, that’s not “aggressive foreign policy.” That’s declaration that constitutional war powers don’t constrain him.

When his defenders argue the violation doesn’t matter because Maduro is evil and outcomes are good, that’s not “different political philosophy.” That’s rejection of constitutional constraint as governing principle.

Every act of “let’s debate the Venezuela policy” is collaboration with framework destruction. Not because debate is bad, but because they’re not proposing policy within the framework—they’re eliminating the framework while we debate.

You can’t defeat “constitutional constraints are optional” by following constitutional constraints politely while the other side wages war from private clubs. You can only defend the framework by using every power that framework provides.

This is the regime crisis I wrote about in the manifesto. This is what happens when democratic constraint disappears. This is what Lincoln fought to prevent.

And this is what defense of the republic requires us to stop.


We cannot treat this as normal politics.

Lincoln preserved the framework. Trump declares himself outside it.

Your grandparents knew which side they were on when the republic was threatened. They fought. They won. They built the middle class and the democratic alliance that kept the peace for seventy years.

We will do it again.

2026 begins now.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. This is an abridged version of a version originally published at his Notes From the Circus.

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Comments on “Trump: The Anti-Lincoln”

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DisgruntledAnonymous (profile) says:

Worse than anti-Lincolin

He’s worse than ‘Anti-Lincolin’, he’s among the worst people that have walked the earth during the 20th and 21st centuries, right alongside Hitler, Mussolini, Putin, Xi Jinping, Polpot, Bin Laden, and a number of other horrid humans that I can’t keep track of.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

You realize all the Venezuelans were super happy that we got Maduro, right? (weirdly, I know several)

We did it with even very few casualties for the enemy, considering. The goal is not to kill soldiers, just to accomplish the mission. Oh, and get this: all the enemy soldiers that died (30) were Cuban. Even my Venezuelan friends thought that was weird.

Capturing Maduro, if it goes well, will save WAY more than 30 lives.

Everything you say is so stupid and out of touch.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

You realize all the Venezuelans were super happy that we got Maduro, right?

I’m sure some Venezuelans were upset about him being kidnapped because they liked or didn’t mind having him in power. But yes, I’m aware that a whole bunch of Venezuelans, both in the nation and abroad, are happy about him being out of power. It’s the whole “the United States invaded a sovereign nation and kidnapped its head of state” thing that people, including Venezuelans, are unhappy about.

We did it with even very few casualties for the enemy, considering.

The fact that the US government did it at all is troubling. That it killed people during that operation doesn’t magically make it better.

Capturing Maduro, if it goes well, will save WAY more than 30 lives.

It will also embolden Trump to pull this shit again if someone pisses him off for even the smallest reason. And it will, in turn, embolden any other head of state who thinks the solution to one or more of their problems is to operate like Trump. If Vladimir Putin were to send his military to kidnap Volodymyr Zelenskyy as a means to putting an end to the Ukraine invasion, on what grounds could the United States ever object to Putin’s actions other than him not giving the US government credit for the idea?

You MAGA chuds always think short-term. You don’t consider the bigger picture, only the “cool” shit and the base-level impulse of “wouldn’t it just be easier if [x]”. Everyone Is 12 Theory applies just as much to you and your red-hat-wearing brethren as it does to the politicians whom the lot of you revere like gods.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Factually, this is what happened: The United States government sent the United States military into a sovereign nation and used military violence (which resulted in dozens of deaths) to enact the kidnapping of that sovereign nation’s current leader. The United States government did that with the expressed and explicit intent to enact a change in government regimes within that sovereign nation⁠—potentially under threat of further military action if that nation’s new regime refuses to work with/for the United States government⁠—so the United States government can claim the natural resources of that sovereign nation. This happened after the United States government murdered dozens of people off the coast of that sovereign nation by way of military strikes on boats, all of which were justified with claims of “terrorists”. And after this specific invasion, the United States government threatened, either implicitly or explicitly, to use military action in both other sovereign nations in that region and in the nation of Greenland as a means of enacting regime change (and in the case of Greenland, to annex Greenland). Tell me when I’m telling lies.

The problems you have in this argument are (A) you don’t have an argument other than “nuh-uh to your uh-huh”, (B) you think “cakeboy” is a stinging insult that shocks my core and makes me weep in a corner when it’s nothing of the sort, and (C) said insult is based on your intentional (and anti-queer) misunderstanding of non-discrimination law. If I were you, I’d find a better argument or shut the fuck up. But you can keep going with what you’re doing, if you’d like. It won’t lead to any fruitful discussions or change my mind about Trump’s kidnapping of Maduro, but I’m sure you’ll be more than happy with a cheap one-off laugh like a dumb kid who thinks trolling an Internet forum is the height of hilarity.

Like I’ve said: Everyone Is 12 Theory remains undefeated.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

We are going to need a new Constitution post-Trump and post-Trumpism. The federal government structure, the checks and balances, the way we hold elections and the seats and titles and powers of the people that we as citizens elect, it all needs to be looked at and changed.

My main ideas are a unicameral federal legislature with Representatives of non-gerrymandered districts brought forth by a new Voting Rights Act that would also make Election Day a holiday, stamp out voter suppression tactics, and requiring all 50 states to make mail-in voting legal for everyone, and a federal Supreme Court that consists of 19 Justices serving staggered terms. Both the federal legislative and federal judiciary branches would have hard term limits baked into the new Constitution.

It’s going to be a lot of hard work fighting back against Trump & Trumpism today. We also, however, need to think about what we need to do after they’re gone. I really would love to see a new Techdirt Greenhouse that includes folks like Mike Brock and others to discuss different facets of how we rebuild, what a day in the life of a new post-Trumpist America might look like, and more.

OSWELL says:

Re:

You are quite correct that that the current Constitution is a major failure; Congress, Presidents, and SCOTUS routinely ignore it.

However you are foolish to believe that simply ‘new’ words on paper will solve the problem of unrestrained Federal power. Any new ink on paper will also be ignored.

The sovereignty and independent power of the individual states was ever THE only real ‘check’ against Federal Government abuses — but Lincoln violently abolished all state sovereinty, de facto reducing states to mere vassals of the central government.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

To be fair, FIFA is waaaaaaaaaaaay more corrupt than the IOC. Example: FIFA’s current leader literally made up a “peace prize” and gave that particular participation trophy to Donald Trump only because Trump didn’t get the Nobel Peace Prize. Even the IOC wouldn’t award a gold medal to Trump for no reason.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

An entire congress and military worth of collaborators

As horrible as Trump is never forget…

The republican controlled congress could have stopped him at any time but chose not to.

The US military could have responded to his orders to bomb boats on nothing but a declaration of guilt, finish off the survivors the one time there were any, and invade another country and kidnap it’s leader but chose not to.

Trump is responsible for a whole slew of horrible things but without a lot of people in the government and military backing him up the amount of damage he could do would be drastically lower, meaning they share just as much if not more responsibility for what has, is, and will happen as he does.

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