I taught a variety of classes at San José State–Introduction to American Government, Parties and Elections, Public Opinion, U.S. Environmental Policy, Controversial Legal Issues, Political Philosophy, American Studies, even a course in Political Film. My favorite course was the Intro to American Government. Most of the students were not political science majors, and I believed it was so important to give them a good grounding in both the Constitutional order and the need for responsible citizenship.
I would not enjoy teaching today. Laws and policies that I thought were enshrined and accepted are going by the boards. I don’t know how you’d begin to discuss what Trump is doing.
For example, Congress has the “power of the purse.” Of the three branches, Congress is mentioned first in the Constitution, and its powers and responsibilities are spelled out in detail. The President is not allowed to allocate funds. The President has no “item veto.” He cannot decide to not spend money that Congress has allocated. Nor can he spend money that Congress has not allocated. He can’t launch attacks on foreign citizens. He must faithfully execute the laws.
And yet Trump has spent money never allocated by Congress. He has refused to spend money that Congress has allocated. He has killed foreign nationals with no declaration of war and bragged about it. He has ignored rights spelled out in the Bill of Rights. I could go on, but every reader of this blog knows that the America Constitution is no longer revered by the Congress, the President, the Supreme Court, nor the members of the Cabinet and heads of Executive agencies.
How do political science professors even begin to deal with that?