Last month, the Supreme Court permitted Donald Trump to remove members of regulatory agencies and to curtail efforts of migrants to win asylum in the United States. In the last several days, the president has lectured NATO partners and described citizens of a longtime American ally as “hopeless, bad people.”

This isn’t a column about Trump’s excesses, bad manners or intemperate language. It’s a column about the office he holds. It’s expanding again. The president who follows him, Republican or Democrat, will inherit an office bigger, broader and more powerful than the one he inherited from Barack Obama in 2017 or Joe Biden in 2021.

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