Offline
A thoughtful essay by a conservative author, that ignores the shiny objects and focuses on the real meat of the issue.
The Conservative Case Against Trump
Ross Douthat
THERE are many lessons that conservatives need to learn from the rise of Donald Trump. There are elements of his message that the party should embrace. There are grievances among his voters that the Republican Party must address.
But for conservatives to support Trump himself, to assist in his election as president of the United States, would be a terrible mistake.
It would be a particularly stark mistake for conservatives who feel that the basic Reaganite vision that’s dominated their party for decades — a fusion of social conservatism, free-market economics, and a hawkish internationalism — still gets things mostly right.
In large ways and small, Trump has consistently arrayed himself against this vision. True, he paid lip service to certain Reaganite ideas during the primaries — claiming to be pro-life, promising a supply-side tax cut, pledging to appoint conservative judges. But the core of his message was protectionist and nativist, comfortable with an expansive welfare state, bored with religious conservatism, and dismissive of the commitments that constitute the post-Cold War Pax Americana. And Trump’s policy forays since clinching the nomination have only confirmed his post-Reagan orientation.
Reaganite conservatives who help elevate Trump to the presidency, then, would be sleepwalking toward a kind of ideological suicide. Successful party leaders often transform parties in their image. William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson between them turned a conservative Democratic Party progressive. Dwight Eisenhower all but extinguished G.O.P. isolationism. Reagan himself set liberal Republicanism on the path to extinction.
A successful President Trump (and to support him is to hope for such a thing) could easily do the same to Reaganism. In a fully-Trumpized G.O.P., Reagan’s ideological coalition would crack up, with hawks drifting toward the Democrats, supply-siders fading into crankery, religious conservatives entering semi-permanent exile. And in its place a Trumpized Republican intelligentsia would arise, with as little interest in Reaganism as today’s conservatives have in the ideas of Nelson Rockefeller or Jacob Javits.
The things conservatives are telling themselves to justify supporting him — at least he might appoint good judges — miss this long-term point. The Reagan coalition might — might! — get an acceptable Supreme Court appointment out of the Trump presidency. But that could easily be the last thing it ever got.
But what if you’re a conservative who isn’t a Reaganite, or you believe that Reaganite ideas have long passed their sell-by dates? What if you agree with Trump about the folly of the Iraq War, the perils of open immigration policies, or the need for a different right-wing economic agenda? What if you think his populism might bring about some necessary creative destruction to a backward-looking G.O.P.?
Then supporting Trump for president could make ideological sense, and the crackup I’ve just described might seem like an advertisement for doing so.
But there still remains the problem of Trump himself. Even if you find things to appreciate in Trumpism — as I have, and still do — the man who has raised those issues is still unfit for an office as awesomely powerful as the presidency of the United States.
His unfitness starts with basic issues of temperament. It encompasses the race-baiting, the conspiracy theorizing, the flirtations with violence, and the pathological lying that have been his campaign-trail stock in trade.
But above all it is Trump’s authoritarianism that makes him unfit for the presidency — his stated admiration for Putin and the Chinese Politburo, his promise to use the power of the presidency against private enterprises, the casual threats he and his surrogates toss off against party donors, military officers, the press, the speaker of the House, and more.
All presidents are tempted by the powers of the office, and congressional abdication has only increased that temptation’s pull. President Obama’s power grabs are part of a bipartisan pattern of Caesarism, one that will likely continue apace under Hillary Clinton.
But far more than Obama or Hillary or George W. Bush, Trump is actively campaigning as a Caesarist, making his contempt for constitutional norms and political niceties a selling point. And given his mix of proud ignorance and immense self-regard, there is no reason to believe that any of this is just an act.
Trump would not be an American Mussolini; even our sclerotic institutions would resist him more effectively than that. But he could test them as no modern president has tested them before — and with them, the health of our economy, the civil peace of our society and the stability of an increasingly perilous world.
In sum: It would be possible to justify support for Trump if he merely promised a period of chaos for conservatism. But to support Trump for the presidency is to invite chaos upon the republic and the world. No policy goal, no court appointment, can justify such recklessness.
To Trumpism’s appeal, to Trump’s constituents, conservatives should listen and answer “yes,” or “maybe,” or “not that, but how about…”
But to Trump himself, there is no patriotic answer except “no.”
Last edited by Goose (5/08/2016 8:25 am)
Offline
This sounds like it was written by a Cruz-bot.
News flash: The world has changed since Reagan. Reagan did not have to contend with rising Islamofascism--the 444 days of "America held hostage" ended at the hour of his Inauguration. Nor had the trade agreements which shipped manufacturing jobs overseas been enacted.
There as a couple of nuggets of truth scattered amid the bravo sierra, but it is mostly the latter.
Offline
I dunno. I found it to be really thoughtful.
Let me ask you, do you find Trump to be any more serious, or likely to be effective against terrorists than any of the other republican candidates? How?
Keep in mind that we've spent over a decade and, perhaps $5 trillion fighting terrorists under two presidents. What would Trump do differently that has impressed you?
And trade is a net positive in my book.
Last edited by Goose (5/08/2016 12:20 pm)
Offline
The wide-screened seize that passes for a southern border is literally the soft underbelly of the U.S. I cannot separate border control from the GWOT, especially since ISIS operatives have been making their way into the U.S. through that vulnerable and largely invisible line.
Pope Francis is correct that we need to build bridges, not walls. But as on a medieval castle's moat, the bridge needs a hefty portcullis.
Offline
It is not the myth of radical terrorists slinking across our borders under the cover of night that should be of concern. It is the alienated individual sitting in insolation in their home, dissatisfied with their life, with access to a cache of weapons and a computer to fuel their anger.
I believe that is what Pope Francis was alluding to when he talked about building bridges instead of walls. An effort has to be made to reach out to these people and reintroduce them to our society before they act out on their perceived imposition of exile by others.
Last edited by Rongone (5/08/2016 5:57 pm)
Offline
Ron,
Excellent point. Reconciliation, rehabilitation, and reintegration.
The alienated are truly the "other" aliens in our midst.
Offline
Do we have any data on the number of ISIS members crossing the southern border?
Offline
Why would ISIS worry about crossing the Southern US Bordes which is MUCH MORE controlled than our Northern border which for the most part is wide open ?
Just sounds like a political talking point that has little to no validity.
Offline
So, are conservatives to be expected to support Trump solely on the basis of his wall fantasy?
That isn't much in the grand scheme of things.
Offline
My guess would be Mr. Douthat is a member of the #Never Trump gang.
So as a conservative republican he is going to vote for Clinton? (The democratic party will never let Bernie any where near the nomination. The system is cooked for Clinton! aka Super Delegates)
Trump is the nominee so as they say Douthat is a day late and a dollar short.........