As a Canadian, watching the events unfolding in the United States feels like witnessing a slow-motion train wreck—except this time, the train isn’t just derailing; it’s being hijacked.
Robert Reich’s recent essay calls it what it is: a coup. Not a hypothetical, not a warning sign, but an active, ongoing takeover of democracy by a handful of powerful men—Trump, Vance, and Musk—who seem to believe the rules no longer apply to them.
From the outside looking in, it’s clear that the American media’s refusal to use the word “coup” is a failure to grasp the gravity of the situation. Canadians, having our own struggles with government accountability, still recognize when a democracy is being dismantled in real time. The U.S. mainstream media's insistence on treating this as just another political crisis or "stress test" of the Constitution is dangerous. This isn’t business as usual—it’s the systematic gutting of democratic institutions.
The Warning Signs Are Clear
Reich outlines three key aspects of this power grab:
1. Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) accessing sensitive federal data—without legal authority. This data includes Social Security payments, inflation tracking, and personal records of American citizens. In the wrong hands, this information could be weaponized for control and misinformation.
2. The freezing of federal funding—despite Congress having the sole authority to allocate money. This move is illegal, yet it's being treated as a political strategy rather than an outright violation of constitutional law.
3. Defiance of federal court orders—a clear rejection of the rule of law. When Vice President JD Vance says, “judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power,” he is openly challenging one of the fundamental pillars of democracy: judicial oversight.
Why This Matters to Canadians
Canada is not immune to democratic backsliding. We’ve seen the erosion of public trust in institutions, the rise of disinformation, and growing authoritarian tendencies among political leaders. If a coup can succeed in the U.S.—one of the world’s most powerful democracies—what’s stopping similar forces from gaining momentum here?
We rely on a stable and democratic United States. If its government is hijacked, the ripple effects will be felt across the world. Canada’s economy, security, and foreign policy are deeply tied to our southern neighbor. The normalization of authoritarian rule next door would embolden similar movements here, making it harder to defend democratic principles at home.
The Media’s Role—and Failure
Reich’s frustration with the media is justified. The refusal to call this a coup is not just semantics; it shapes public perception. If the mainstream press continues to treat this as a political dispute rather than an illegal power grab, Americans won’t see the full picture. Without clear reporting, there can be no meaningful resistance.
In Canada, we’ve seen how media narratives influence public opinion. When powerful figures control the message, they control reality. The slow acceptance of authoritarian tactics in the U.S. should serve as a stark warning to Canadian journalists: call things what they are before it’s too late.
What Can We Do?
As Canadians, we can’t vote in the U.S., but we’re not powerless. We can:
Support independent journalism—both in Canada and the U.S.—that isn’t afraid to call out authoritarianism.
Speak out—on social media, in conversations, and in letters to editors. Silence is complicity.
Pay attention to our own government—and recognize the early warning signs of democratic decline. Canada isn’t immune.
The world is watching. If Americans don’t recognize what’s happening to their democracy, history will remember those who tried to warn them. From here in Canada, we see it clearly: this is a coup. The question is, will Americans act before it’s too late?
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