By Ben Shapiro
Tuesday, January 09, 2018
Over the weekend, Oprah Winfrey made her 2020 bid nearly
official with a stunningly, magnificently, incandescently, incomparably brave
speech about sexual harassment in Hollywood — a speech so courageous that
somewhere, Dietrich Bonhoeffer smiles from above and Winston Churchill lights a
stogie in tribute. The speech featured Winfrey comparing herself to Sidney
Poitier, likening Alabama circa 1944 to America circa 2018, and suggesting that
finally, finally!, our Tinseltown
thought leaders had arrived to lead us away from the degraded muck of sexual
abuse and toward a brighter, more equal future.
Then they went to parties wearing thousand-dollar gowns
to hang out with those same sexual abusers. But no matter: Oprah’s presidential
ambitions had been launched. NBC tweeted out that she was “OUR president.” Reese
Witherspoon compared Oprah to Jesus: “I will now officially divide time like
this: Everything that happened before #Oprah speech: Everything that will
happen after.”
Worth noting: Nothing has officially happened after. And
not much happened before.
Meanwhile, President Trump engaged in his own
reality-television special over the weekend. It began over the launch of
Michael Wolff’s new gossip book, based largely on interviews with self-serving
human snake Steve Bannon; the book suggests that President Trump is a numbskull
with a crazy streak. This led Trump to take to Twitter, where he explained,
“Actually, throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental
stability and being, like, really smart. Crooked Hillary also played these
cards very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames. I went from VERY
successful businessman, to top T.V. Star . . . . . . . to President of the
United States (on my first try). I think that would qualify as not smart, but
genius. . . . and a very stable genius at that!”
These are, to put it mildly, not the words of a very
stable genius. They are closer to the words of Fredo Corleone, explaining to
his brother Michael that he is indeed “smaht,” and that he deserves respect.
But the reality show didn’t end there. Trump then
deployed Stephen Miller, the aide most responsible for structuring Trump’s
immigration policy (and a supposed ally of Bannon’s), to CNN with the goal of
restoring Trump’s credibility. There, after starting on a high note by
attacking Bannon, Miller lit himself on fire while declaiming Trump’s
heartbreaking genius. Jake Tapper ended up throwing Miller off the set, and CNN
security reportedly had to escort the exercised aide from the premises.
So, what do these two events have in common?
They demonstrate rather clearly that the American people
have two very different ideas of what the president does: what they actually believe, and what they say they believe. When asked, most
Americans will say they believe the presidency is about the policies presidents
pursue: economic growth, military strength, and the rest. From this
perspective, Oprah isn’t qualified to be president; neither was Trump, but we
ought to ignore his Twitter foolishness and instead focus on his
accomplishments. If we hold by this picture of the presidency, we ought to
pretend that what the president does
holds all the weight, and what he says
holds nearly none.
Then there’s what Americans really think the president does. They think he talks. They think he
speaks. They think he acts as a figurehead on the prow of state, thrusting a
certain picture of American character into the world. In this world, what the
president says matters far more than what he does. After all, legislative
priorities change and executive policy morphs, but character is forever.
Unfortunately, when it comes to electoral politics, it’s
the second picture of the presidency that prevails. That’s why Trump’s Twitter
antics damage him, and it’s why Oprah’s delivery of an overblown speech in
front of her cronies in Los Angeles could launch her. The image of America is
bound, in Americans’ mind, with the image of the presidency.
Practically, that means that electing the president has
become the equivalent of voting for the royal family, rather than voting for a
person to implement policy. The fact that the person we elect does implement policy shouldn’t change
our view of how elections work. Trump demonstrates that dichotomy in bold
colors.
And that means
that what Trump says matters. He needs to behave credibly, no matter what
policy he’s pushing. Policy simply isn’t enough. If it were, Oprah wouldn’t be
anywhere near the conversation, and Trump wouldn’t be anywhere near the White
House.
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