In a healthy and functional Republic, the rule of law is accepted by all political factions as a baseline for order and security.
As a free people, we may agree or disagree about many things as individuals. In voluntary groups, we might organize and lobby for policies, programs and laws that lead to desired outcomes.
We can and should debate such matters, and either vote on them as individuals or through our freely elected representatives.
Once such matters are decided by democratic means, the rule of law impels us to respect those decisions, even if they are not what we ourselves favored, as long as such rules or laws are consistent with the foundational social compact under which we have agreed to be governed. In the United States, that would be our Constitution, and for each individual state in the Union, their own constitutions whose provisions must accord with superior Federal law.
When individuals or groups no longer agree to be bound by such rules, and instead seek to circumvent them to achieve what could not otherwise be accomplished through the accepted processes and procedures of voting or law-making: the rule of law is rendered ineffectual, and its enabling statutes reduced to meaningless words.
What happens then, when an entire political movement (and the party that claims to represent it) no longer truly respects, values or recognizes as valid the very foundational documents, the organizational structures and the procedural rules that it once established for governance of the nation?
I ask only because that is where I believe we are right now. I do not expect that most people who wish to continue life under the same documents and principles will find comfort in the answers.