this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2026
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So your argument is "why didn't Biden become a dictator first"?
Not sure how you got that other than arguing in bad faith. Democrats are paralyzed into inaction as Republicans fling shit at the wall until something sticks. This paralysis is why a person like Biden would sit on those files for four years, fearing he would appear partisan if he pushed for their release.
He didn't "sit on the files". They were under DOJ's purview, because there used to be three separate branches of government that checked and balanced one another. I'm not saying the DOJ under Biden didn't absolutely drop the ball, because they did. I'm just saying that Trump's weaponizing of the DOJ is antithetical not to "decorum", but to democracy. Biden doing it first would have constituted executive overreach just as much as Trump doing it now.
Which branch of the government does the DOJ belong to? Who's at the top of that branch?
Fair point. But there did used to be three branches that checked one another. The reason DJT can effectively do whatever he wants through the DOJ is because those checks and balances are no longer in place. If Biden had tried to do with DOJ what Trump has done (which I still would argue that he absolutely should not have), the USSC would have had something to say about it—similar to how they checked him when he (with Sec of Ed) attempted to forgive roughly half a trillion dollars of student debt.
To be clear, I'm not saying Biden (or his executive branch or the 117th congress or the USSC) was effective or.. idk, good? They absolutely weren't. I'm saying that for Biden to weaponize various departments and agencies (even for the arguable benefit of Americans), he'd have had to have engaged in the same slide into authoritarianism that Trump has.