By David Harsanyi
Wednesday, May 31, 2017
If you ever wanted to understand the corrosive power of
tribal loyalty, there are two new articles for you to read. The first is a
Daily Beast article exploring the reinvention of Maxine Waters, a congresswoman
“once dubbed the ‘most corrupt’” in Washington. The second is a column titled
“Why Conservatives Still Attack Trump,” in which radio host Dennis Prager
attempts to figure out why so many Republicans refuse to walk lockstep with
Donald Trump.
Let’s start with Waters, who is, of course, still corrupt — a dictator-loving
conspiracy-theorist who’s abused her office for decades. She is now the
recipient of standing ovations for her sharp attacks on Trump. The esteem
Waters receives not only exposes the hypocrisy of many who claim to resist
Trump on constitutional and ethical grounds, but warns against aligning
yourself with people who don’t respect the norms they claim to protect.
Those who advocate overturning the Citizens United ruling and allowing the state to ban political
speech — so almost every liberal — have little business lecturing about free
expression. Nor do those who, only a few months ago, proposed ditching
Fifth Amendment protections in an effort to confiscate guns. Nor do those
whose opposition to spying on American citizens is contingent on which
president is in office. The notion that Chris Murphy or Adam Schiff are
guardians of the Constitution is laughable.
Obligatory post-election anti-Trumpism, which dictates
absolute opposition to what this one person is doing, puts you in league with
people whose concern has little to do with the Constitution and everything to
do with their ideology. Never Trump was once a statement of intent. It’s often
now a demand for conservatives to engage in hysterics every time the word
Russia appears. No, thanks.
A good example is the Paris Agreement. “We can’t let Pres
@BarackObama’s global effort to reduce carbon pollution with the
#ParisAgreement be undone in one fell swoop,” Sen. Chuck Schumer tweeted
recently. According to Democrats, the agreement is the most crucial
international deal the world has ever known, yet not important enough to be
subjected to the traditional checks and balances of American governance.
When the next liberal president is elected, he or she
will use the Environmental Protection Agency to bypass Congress and, by fiat,
regulate carbon dioxide, a chemical compound that permeates everything, without
any consideration for the cost or the electorate. So, in other words, in the
same way Democrats bypass the process when making immigration policy or social
policy or any policy they don’t have the votes to enact.
In 2014, Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe — now also
a hero of the resistance — reminded us that this kind of governance is what
Justice Robert Jackson warned about when he spoke to “the balanced power
structure of our Republic.” Rest assured, no one at The New York Times will lament the corrosion of process or
executive abuse when that day comes.
If Trump does withdraw from the Paris Accord, however, he
will be strengthening the balance of power in this country. No, I’m not under
the impression he would do so out of some deep reverence for the sanctity of
the Constitution. No standing ovations from me. But it is what it is.
“We are not so different, you and I,” Prager might say to
Democrats. His position, after all, is AlwaysTrump, a demand to ignore every
scandal and fumble for the greater good. In his column, Prager asks Republicans
to “Please report for duty:”
I have concluded that there are a
few reasons that explain conservatives who were Never-Trumpers during the
election, and who remain anti-Trump today. The first and, by far, the greatest
reason is this: They do not believe that America is engaged in a civil war, with
the survival of America as we know it at stake.
If the survival of the United States hinges on the
competence of the Trump administration, then the civil war is lost, I’m afraid.
If, however, the survival of the United States hinges on a set of ideals and
laws — which is what I have always understood Prager’s position to be — then
there is no obligation to follow any man. Certainly not a man with malleable
principles. And I’m sure if Trump were sending pallets of cash to Iran, even if
his tax plan were better than Ronald Reagan’s, Prager wouldn’t be insisting on
this level of support for Trump.
Prager circumvents this problem by claiming that the
president has acted in a wholly conservative manner. Yet his recklessness and temperament certainly
aren’t conservative, nor are many of his ideas. But setting that aside for a
moment, if the case against President Obama was predicated not only on his
policies but the way he abused the mechanisms of power, then surely Trump
deserves criticism, as well.
And if a person is truly apprehensive about creeping
“authoritarianism” — these days, the prevailing concern of the same Democrats
who push policies that almost exclusively coerce Americans economically — rigid
group-thinking just isn’t feasible anymore. Anti, anti-anti, pro, whatever. The
sad truth is that there are simply too many people acting reprehensibly in
Washington for many Americans to be a member of any of these tribes.
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