The Founders Were Afraid for the Country, Too

Jamelle Bouie – March 15, 2025

A statue of Benjamin Franklin in the U.S. Capitol.
Ben FranklinCredit…Jonno Rattman for The New York Times

While writing my column this week, I was reminded of Benjamin Franklin’s famous quip about the outcome of the 1787 constitutional convention in Philadelphia. As the story goes, Franklin was leaving the hall after signing the Constitution when he approached by Elizabeth Powel, a close friend of George Washington’s. She asked whether the delegates had decided on a monarchy or a republic.

“A republic,” Franklin replied, “if you can keep it.”

This anecdote comes to us by way of James McHenry, a delegate from Maryland who later served as the United States’ third secretary of war. It was recorded in “The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787” and has had remarkable staying power in the decades and centuries since it entered popular memory.

The reason, I think, is that it captures better than almost anything else the apprehension and uncertainty that marked the first decade of the American republic.

Somewhat lost to history in our memory and mythology of the founding fathers is the fact that their optimism regarding their capacity to make the world anew was tempered by a deep pessimism born of past precedent and their own experiences as statesmen and politicians.

The framers were more than aware of the fragile and short-lived nature of republican government. “It is impossible to read the history of the petty republics of Greece and Italy without feeling sensations of horror and disgust at the distractions with which they were continually agitated, and at the rapid succession of revolutions by which they were kept in a state of perpetual vibration between the extremes of tyranny and anarchy,” Alexander Hamilton observed in Federalist No. 9, voicing the conventional wisdom of many of his peers. “If they exhibit occasional calms, these only serve as short-lived contrast to the furious storms that are to succeed.”

Accordingly, their own choices were informed by the examples of the past. They would avoid the direct democracy of Athens in favor of a system of representation; they would blend representation with the aristocratic elements of the Roman republic; and they would create a new office, the presidency, that would tether the executive power to the rule of law.

The product of human failings and human frailties, despotism could not help but lurk around every corner. The best the framers could do was to design their new government to be as resilient as it could be in the face of ambition and the will to power.

But, of course, there was no guarantee that it would work.

There is a wonderful book by the political scientist Dennis C. Rasmussen, titled “Fears of a Setting Sun: The Disillusionment of America’s Founders,” that both captures and explains the pessimism of the revolutionary generation.

George Washington, for instance, feared that the nation would be pulled apart by faction and partisanship. “I have, for sometime past, viewed the political concerns of the United States with an anxious, and painful eye,” wrote Washington near the end of his life in a letter to none other than the aforementioned McHenry. “They appear to me, to be moving by hasty strides to some awful crisis; but in what they will result — that Being, who sees, foresees, and directs all things, alone can tell.”

Hamilton, who devoted his life in politics to building a strong national government, feared that the political system was too weak to secure a strong future for the nation. “Truly, My dear Sir, the prospects of our Country are not brilliant,” he wrote to Rufus King after Thomas Jefferson took office, complaining that the new president pushed a vision of “No army, no navy, no active commerce … as little government as possible.”

John Adams saw a lack of virtue among the people and feared that they would not be able to resist the temptations of a demagogue. “If there is any Thing Serious in this World, the Selfishness of our Countrymen is not only Serious but melancholy, foreboding ravages of Ambition and Avarice which never were exceeded on this Selfish Globe,” he wrote to his son, John Quincy Adams,. “You have seen much of it. I have seen more.…The distemper in our Nation is so general, and so certainly incurable.”

Interestingly, the founding father who lived longest into the 19th century, James Madison, retained a great deal more optimism about the future of the American Republic. “A Government like ours has so many safety valves, giving vent to overheated passions,” he wrote to the Marquis de Lafayette, commenting on the Missouri crisis, “that it carries within itself a relief against the infirmities from which the best of human Institutions cannot be exempt.”

To take the pessimism of the founders seriously — to really engage with their fears — is to see the extent to which they weren’t all wrong.

Washington’s warnings about the dangers of faction are, these days, well taken, especially as we observe in real time the ways that narrow political allegiance and fear of party censure can supersede a lawmaker’s commitment to anything broader than immediate partisan interest. How might Republicans in Congress deal with the illegal, unconstitutional and anti-constitutional actions of the White House if they weren’t so concerned with winning the next primary or raising money for the next campaign?

We can both recognize that modern democracy is inconceivable without the political party — it is a necessary coordinating institution — while also giving due credit to Washington who could see, even in those early years, the dangers that factional behavior and blind partisanship could pose to even a well-ordered political system.

Adams’s warnings about the consequences of a lack of virtue land especially hard in light of the rampant dishonesty that almost defines American politics at this moment in time. This isn’t the more ordinary fudging of truth that attends politics in most places and at most times; no, this is the kind of blatant and unapologetic lying that degrades public life itself. This is going before the American people and telling them things you know are not true to gain power, and then using that power to pursue your own interests against the public good.

Or look at the extent to which too many Americans indulge the worst forms of conspiratorial thinking, who indulge the worst fantasies about their political opponents and believe anything they’re told, as long as it flatters their prejudices and preconceptions about people on the other side of a political or cultural divide. This, too, is a rejection of civic virtue, of the good faith and good will that we ought to show our fellow citizens because we are not engaged in a winner-take-all struggle as much as we are a collective effort to live together as peacefully as we can.

Hamilton’s fears about anarchy were mostly about his disdain for democracy. And yet, as we bear witness to an aggressive attempt to dismantle the federal bureaucracy, we may find that he was right about the dangers of a weak state for the peace and security of the nation.

Against all of this, there is Madison’s optimism. And I have to say that I am inclined by disposition to stand with Madison.

Many groups of Americans — especially those who, because of race or religion, have found themselves outside the so-called mainstream — have faced challenges far worse than those at hand. They have had to survive as second-class citizens under authoritarian rule, or as supposed enemy nationals confined to internment camps, or as dangerous radicals suppressed and surveilled by their government.

The United States, it suffices to say, has been far from benign toward many of its own citizens. But even in the face of real oppression, those Americans (and their allies) had the capacity to fight for equality, to fight for democracy, to fight to make this country so much more than what it is often content to be.

After surveying the many difficulties facing the country, Madison wrote, at the very end of his life, that he was “far however from desponding, of the great political experiment in the hands of the American people.” Madison had seen and experienced a lifetime’s worth of political turmoil. Through it all, however, the republic endured. And as his time on this earth came to a close, he still believed in the strength of the system he had helped to create.

I’m not so sure about the strength of that system. (It should be said that a generation after Madison’s death, his Constitution collapsed under the weight of the slave system that gave him his livelihood.) I’m a little more optimistic about the American people themselves. Democracy is our birthright — it’s part of who we are. At our best, we are jealous of our freedom and eager to expand our collective liberty for the sake of a more egalitarian society.

We have a would-be despot in the White House. But even with a rotting Constitution on the verge of crisis, this is still a Republic, and the people are still sovereign. The task, then, is to make this clear to those in power who would like to pretend otherwise.

Gov. Tim Walz launching town hall tour in Republican House districts

Bring Me the News

Gov. Tim Walz launching town hall tour in Republican House districts

Tommy Wiita – March 13, 2025

Gov. Tim Walz is planning stops at House districts around the United States represented by Republicans who have stopped holding town halls due to ongoing backlash to federal cuts by President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk.

Walz announced the tour of red states on Wednesday, with the move a significant indicator that he intends to run for president in 2028, after his time as Kamala Harris’ running mate in 2024.

Walz is planning stops beginning on Friday in Iowa’s 3rd District, which is represented by Rep. Zach Nunn, and will then head to Nebraska’s 2nd District, home to Rep. Don Bacon, according to national media reports. His office also has stops planned in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio as well.

“I’m going to go out there and make sure those folks down in Iowa know that their [Rep. Nunn] doesn’t want to come talk to them but he voted for this stuff,” Walz said during an appearance on MSNBC. “He voted to defund these things, he voted to make it impossible to talk to the VA and cut 70,000 people to care for our veterans. By the way, many of those 70,000 are veterans themselves.”

“So I think again this is us going out and talking to people, making the case that people are absolutely clear that both parties are not the same: one stands with Elon Musk, the billionaires and the dismantling of America as we know it, and one that’s going to be there for their families. And if we’re not out there, Donald Trump, all the podcasts, all the money will fill that void … I hope people show up at that town hall and say, ‘look governor, what are you offering? Are you offering anything better?’ That’s fair. But to turn your back and not do it, it’s dangerous.”

But Walz’s announcement has drawn criticism from Republicans in Minnesota, with state Rep. Zach Duckworth accusing him of abandoning Minnesota at a time it is facing a $6 billion budget deficit by 2029.

“All great selfless leaders leave their job during its most critical moments – like solving a $6 Billion deficit they created,” he said. “Abandoning Minnesota mid session when the real work is about to begin is publicly admitting you’re not needed and have no interest in actually governing.”

Walz aims to fill void after Republican advice on town halls

It’s been reported that Republicans representatives have been advised by NRCC chairperson Rep. Richard Hudson to not hold town halls going forward due to backlash over the Trump administration’s policies.

It follows a series of high-profile confrontations at Republican town halls held across the U.S., which saw representatives assailed by local residents angry by the scale and severity of the cuts and layoffs being imposed by the administration and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Musk.

Walz reacted to the NRCC’s order on Twitter, suggesting that he would host an event in a district a Republican currently holds to gain more support for Democrats.

“That’s a shame. If your Republican representative won’t meet with you because their agenda is so unpopular, maybe a Democrat will,” Walz said. “Hell, maybe I will. If your congressman refuses to meet, I’ll come host an event in their district to help local Democrats beat ‘em.”

Related: Gov. Walz offers to step in and hold town halls if Republicans won’t

Walz later told CNN he had been overwhelmed by the response to that tweet, saying his staff has been sifting through “hundreds of invitations from local party leaders and candidates asking him to come.”

Outside of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been holding events in Republican districts for the past several weeks, no other major Democratic leaders have done the same.

Minnesota currently has four congressional districts controlled by Republicans: Rep. Brad Finstad in the 1st Congressional District; Rep. Tom Emmer in the 6th Congressional District; Rep. Michelle Fischbach in the 7th Congressional District; and Rep. Pete Stauber in the 8th Congressional District. It’s unclear if Walz intends to visit any, some or all of these districts during his tour.

The Minnesota governor told CNN he intends to tell voters that it “doesn’t have to be this way,” referencing this week’s move by the administration to slash the U.S. Department of Education in half.

Related: Walz slams Department of Education cuts, says it will undermine schools and children

On Wednesday, Walz called out the Trump administration’s firing of nearly half the Department of Education, saying it will have a “detrimental impact on children.”

“This is undermining our economic wellbeing for the future, it’s undermining our competitive advantage, and it’s undermining the moral authority that every child truly matters. So what Donald Trump continues to do is the idiocy of whatever he thinks at the time is a good talking point,” Walz said during a Democratic Governors call held on Wednesday.

Gov. Tim Walz speaks in Bloomington, Minn. on Aug. 1, 2024. Photo courtesy of Office of Governor Tim Walz via Flickr.
Gov. Tim Walz speaks in Bloomington, Minn. on Aug. 1, 2024. Photo courtesy of Office of Governor Tim Walz via Flickr.

Kremlin told U.S. it didn’t want Trump’s Ukraine-Russia envoy at peace talks

NBC News

Kremlin told U.S. it didn’t want Trump’s Ukraine-Russia envoy at peace talks

Keir Simmons – March 13, 2025

President Donald Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia was excluded from high-level talks on ending the war after the Kremlin said it didn’t want him there, a U.S. administration official and a Russian official told NBC News.

Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg was conspicuously absent from two recent summits in Saudi Arabia — one with Russian officials and the other with Ukrainians — even though the talks come under his remit.

“Together,” Trump said in announcing Kellogg’s nomination in November, “we will secure PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH.”

But Kellogg did not attend U.S.-Russia talks in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, on Feb. 18. Russian President Vladimir Putin thought he was too pro-Ukraine, a senior Russian official with direct knowledge of the Kremlin’s thinking told NBC News.

“Kellogg is a former American general, too close to Ukraine. Not our kind of person, not of the caliber we are looking for,” according to the official, who is not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

A U.S. official in the Trump administration, who is also not authorized to speak publicly, confirmed that Russia did not want Kellogg involved. The official did not know when that was communicated to the White House.

Where this leaves Kellogg is unclear.

Kellogg’s office did not respond to requests for comment on why he has not been involved in the negotiations and whether Russia had requested that he not attend.

National Security Council spokesman James Hewitt said Trump had “utilized the talents of multiple senior administration officials to assist in the bringing the war in Ukraine to a peaceful resolution.” He added that Kellogg remained “a valued part of the team, especially as it relates to talks with our European allies.”

Ending the war

Kellogg, 80, is a staunch Trump loyalist who served in various roles in Trump’s first term, including a stint as Vice President Mike Pence’s national security adviser.

Before he was confirmed as Trump’s envoy for Russia-Ukraine peace in January, he wrote about what he called the Biden administration’s “incompetent” foreign policies.

Image: TOPSHOT-UKRAINE-US-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-WAR (Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Keith Kellogg in Kyiv last month.

In a paper for the America First Policy Institute, which was founded to promote Trump’s policies, he suggested that to end the war the United States should arm Ukraine and strengthen its defenses, thus ensuring that “Russia will make no further advances and will not attack again after a cease-fire or peace agreement.”

“Future American military aid, however, will require Ukraine to participate in peace talks with Russia,” Kellogg and his co-author, Fred Fleit, wrote.

During his presidential campaign, Trump said that it was a top priority to end the war, which started in February 2022 when Russia launched a full-scale invasion of its smaller neighbor, and that he would halt hostilities “24 hours” after taking office.

The war has raged on after Trump became president for a second time, with Russia making slow progress on the battlefield in Ukraine and pressing Ukrainian forces that had taken a sliver of Russian territory across the border in Kursk.

Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery toward Russian positions in the Donetsk region last year. (Evgeniy Maloletka / AP)
Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery toward Russian positions in the Donetsk region last year.

On Feb. 11, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, went to Moscow and spent 3½ hours with Putin.

There is no official account of their meeting. Witkoff had traveled to Russia to help secure the release of Marc Fogel, an American teacher held for 3½ years for a minor medical cannabis infraction.

In a CBS News interview, Witkoff, a New York real estate developer and a friend of Trump’s, called his hourslong meeting with Putin a “trust building” assignment from Trump. He said that he was the only U.S. official present at the meeting and that he carried a message for Putin from Trump. Witkoff also said Putin “had something for me to transmit back to the president” but did not say what it was.

The following day, Trump wrote on Truth Social that he had spoken with Putin and that they had “agreed to have our respective teams start negotiations immediately.”

“We agreed to work together, very closely, including visiting each other’s Nations,” he added.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov later said that during the 90-minute call, Putin “expressed readiness to receive American officials in Russia regarding areas of mutual interest, including, of course, the topic of Ukrainian settlement.”

On Feb. 13, Trump announced a list of diplomats who would attend the talks with Russia. Witkoff, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and national security adviser Michael Waltz were on the team led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio

Kellogg was not on the list. A second U.S. official told NBC News at the time that the decision stung him.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio during talks with Russian officials in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Feb. 18, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein / AFP - Getty Images)
U.S. and Russian officials meet at Riyadh’s Diriyah Palace on Feb. 18.

A representative for Witkoff would not comment when NBC News asked whether his boss discussed Kellogg’s exclusion with Putin.

Asked last week whether Russian officials had requested that Kellogg not be included in the high-level talks, Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that it was up to American leaders to “fix their delegation” and that Russia’s diplomats had “great experience of dealing with different envoys.”

Andrei Fedorov, a former deputy foreign minister who maintains close ties with the Kremlin, went further, telling NBC News that Kellogg was “not the person with whom Russia will negotiate with” because his position on the talks was to freeze the front line in Ukraine.

Russia wants Kyiv’s forces to withdraw from Ukrainian regions where there is still fighting, including the southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia administrative regions, known as oblasts, Fedorov, said.

Russia illegally annexed the regions, along with Donetsk and Luhansk, in September 2022.

Little was said about the war in Ukraine after Rubio and his team met with Russian officials in Riyadh on Feb. 18, although Rubio did announce that the countries had agreed to restore embassy staffing.

Trump has since played hardball with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, with relations reaching a low point after their extraordinary Oval Office spat on Feb. 28. The United States subsequently paused intelligence sharing and providing security assistance to Ukraine.

From left: National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and Secretary of State Marco Rubio meeting with Ukrainian officials Andriy Yermak, Andrii Sybiha and Rustem Umerovin Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on March 11, 2025. (AFP - Getty Images)
National security adviser Michael Waltz and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, met with Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday.

The pause was lifted Tuesday after a Ukrainian delegation agreed to a proposal for a 30-day interim ceasefire at a meeting in Saudi Arabia with Rubio and his team

Kellogg was not present.

On Thursday, Trump dispatched Witkoff to Russia again.

Shortly after he arrived, Putin said at a news conference that he agreed “with the proposals to stop the hostilities” but that there were issues that needed to be discussed. He added that he may need to “have a phone call with Trump.”

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Document for Russian leaders outlines plan to prolong Ukraine war by creating Trump tensions, report says

The Independent

Document for Russian leaders outlines plan to prolong Ukraine war by creating Trump tensions, report says

Gustaf Kilander – March 13, 2025

A document prepared for the Kremlin by a Moscow-based think tank states that “a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine war cannot happen before 2026,” according to The Washington Post.

The document, drawn up in February, outlines the Russian plan to weaken the U.S. position on the Ukraine crisis by boosting tensions between the Trump White House and other nations as Russia moves ahead with its plans to pick apart the country.

The document, obtained by a European intelligence agency and reviewed by The Post, argues that the current Ukrainian government needs to be fully dismantled. “The current Kyiv regime cannot be changed from inside the country. Its complete dismantling is needed,” the report states.

The think tank behind the document has close connections to Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB), which is in charge of Russian operations in the war-torn country, and pushes extreme demands for a peace deal, stating that President Donald Trump’s plan to reach a peace agreement within 100 days is “impossible.”

The plan also rejects any notion that peacekeepers be allowed in Ukraine, as several European leaders have suggested. In addition, the document insists on recognition of Russian sovereignty over the territory it has seized in Ukraine.

The document calls for a buffer zone in northeast Ukraine on the border with the Russian regions of Bryansk and Belgorod, in addition to a demilitarized zone in southern Ukraine close to Crimea, the peninsula illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.

Vladimir Putin may not be interested in a peace deal with Ukraine any time soon, analysts say (AP)
Vladimir Putin may not be interested in a peace deal with Ukraine any time soon, analysts say (AP)

Following talks in Saudi Arabia, Ukraine has endorsed a proposal from the U.S. for a 30-day ceasefire.

But analysts told The Post that Russia still has ways it can prolong the fighting, and that the path to a peace deal remains fraught with difficulty.

Council on Foreign Relations fellow Thomas Graham, who was senior Russia director at the National Security Council during George W. Bush’s administration, said Russia is “not interested in an early resolution of the Ukraine crisis.”

He noted: “They consistently talk about the root causes, which … are about the domestic politics in Ukraine, and even more important than that, the European security architecture, which would be the role of NATO. A simple ceasefire which doesn’t take that into account is of no interest to Russia. And Trump doesn’t appear to understand.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told the newspaper that the Russian government “was not aware of such recommendations” outlined in the document.

He said they were “extremely contradictory,” and added: “We are working with more-considered options.”

The document was put together ahead of talks on February 18 between Russia and the U.S. in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

A Russian academic with connections to top Russian diplomats told The Post that the recommendations in the document are an amalgamation of the consensus in the Russian capital. He noted that it’s unclear how much the Kremlin takes into account documents prepared for it.

The document states that without official recognition of the territories seized by Russia, it’s likely that the fighting would begin again — “for example after the next change of administration in the U.S.”

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