
The Regime Change
What if the greatest threat to American democracy wasn't a foreign adversary - but a set of legal doctrines, executive precedents, and broken norms assembled over a century and handed to someone with no interest in their limits?
When Donald Trump took the oath of office in January 2017, he didn't just inherit a presidency. He inherited a machine - a post-9/11 surveillance apparatus, an Office of Legal Counsel that had never learned to say no, a civil service exposed by decades of incremental politicization, and emergency powers broad enough to fund a border wall without Congress ever voting yes.
The Regime Change is the book that names this machine, maps every lever inside it, and shows - in precise, forensic detail - exactly how far those levers were pulled. From the gutting of DOJ independence to the remaking of the federal judiciary for a generation, from the disinformation strategy that shattered America's shared factual reality to the six-page legal memo that nearly invalidated a presidential election without a single law being visibly broken - this is not a partisan account. It is a constitutional autopsy.
Written with the precision of investigative journalism and the weight of constitutional scholarship, The Regime Change is the first book to trace the full arc: not Trump as aberration, but Trump as culmination. Every future president - Democrat or Republican - now inherits Schedule F, the immunity doctrine, the judicial appointments, and the knowledge that a Department of Justice can be bent without breaking.
The question is no longer whether Donald Trump remade the American presidency. He did. The question - the urgent one - is whether it can be unmade, and whether the will to try still exists.
Pick up The Regime Change today. The window is open. It will not remain open indefinitely.
Praise
