By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Many people are to blame for the rise of Donald Trump as
a political force, and most of them reside on my side of the aisle. But that
story is familiar by now. And we’ll be hearing a lot more about it. Should
Trump lose, conservatives will be lucky if the ensuing riot of recriminations
falls short of outright civil war. Should Trump win, I’m hoping to get a tent
upwind from the latrine at the re-education camp. (I kid, I kid.)
Still, not all of the blame belongs inside the
conservative family.
Consider President Obama. One of the central insights of
both the Obama campaign and administration (the difference is subtle but real)
is that Obama benefits when his critics overreact. In 2008, then-political
adviser David Axelrod coined the phrase “no drama Obama” to describe not only
his client’s personality but his messaging. By seeming unflappable in the face
of criticism, Obama comes across as presidential. The more heated the
criticism, the more presidential he seems.
The thing is, Obama often intentionally provokes the
conservative base. As the Washington Post’s
Paul Waldman put it in January 2015, Obama “seems to come up with a new idea
every couple of weeks to drive [the GOP] up a wall.” That makes him a master at
trolling.
For those still not up to speed with the lingo,
“trolling” is an Internet term for saying outrageous things in order to elicit
an even more outraged response. Or, as Urban Dictionary defines it, “The art of
deliberately, cleverly, and secretly pissing people off.”
For instance, although ideology and policy no doubt play
a role in Obama’s frequent refusal to use the phrase “Islamic terrorism,” he
also seems to enjoy watching his critics shriek about it.
In late 2014, when Obama announced that he was going to
unilaterally block the deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants in
the country — after insisting for years that the Constitution wouldn’t allow
him to do anything of the sort — many writers on the left and the right recognized
that at least part of his strategy was to bait Republicans. Obama could have
changed the policy quietly, without much fanfare. Instead, he sought to incite
as much right-wing anger as possible.
Tellingly, the White House didn’t give the exclusive to
Univision or MSNBC, but to Fox News. As liberal writer Bill Scher put it in Politico, “Operation Epic Troll” was a
“smashing success.”
Obama played a similar game with his birth certificate
and the whole birther craze. He could have released his birth certificate as
early as 2008, when the Mephistophelean Clinton henchman Sid Blumenthal was
whispering in reporters’ ears. But Obama didn’t for years — in part because he
knew the conspiracy theory would galvanize his base. It not only confirmed
everything liberals wanted to hear about the Right, it also provided Obama with
an endless supply of one-liners. And for a long time that worked well for
Obama; he got to mock birthers and play the dignified victim.
You can probably already see the problem. When you throw
out so many buckets of chum, you have no idea what kinds of creatures you’ll
attract.
Obama chummed the waters for so long, he pulled in a
great white shark. A man often in error but never in doubt, with a thumbless
grasp of facts and a total willingness to repeat conspiracy theories, rumors,
and innuendo as the truth, Trump was almost the personification of the
collective id of the angrier strata of the Republican base.
Trump’s claim last week that he was doing a public
service by “ending” the issue Clinton “started” was itself a brilliant bit of
trollery. He was trying to have it both ways, simultaneously saying that the
birther movement was nefarious and illegitimate from the beginning, and that he
was some kind of statesman for relentlessly pushing the birther story.
None of that matters now. Like Obama, Trump exploited
birtherism for his own advantage, worming his way into the GOP. Obama allowed
the issue to fester in the fever swamps of the Right, and now he’s facing the
real possibility that he will be replaced by the Swamp Thing.
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