By Nick Catoggio
Thursday, January 18, 2024
Good
evening! We’re five days away from the most competitive presidential primary
the Republican Party has seen in eight years.
Here
is the frontrunner’s closing
message:
“People
do these elaborate takes about Trump’s authoritarian aspirations and then he
just comes out and says the president should be allowed to do infinite
crimes,” Matt
Yglesias marveled.
Trump
2024: Infinite Crimes. It has a ring to it.
Never
mind what his logic would mean for Joe
Biden’s power to behave with impunity or that the country went 230
years without prosecuting presidents for mistakes until one made the “mistake”
of attempting a coup. “Infinite crimes” is true to the spirit of a person whose
existence has been spent pursuing selfish interests and ferociously resenting
impediments placed in his way. Case in point: Scroll through his feed at Truth Social and
you’ll find him posting manically over the last few days not about the election
or his policy plans for a second term but about his vendetta against
the woman who successfully sued him civilly last year for rape.
When
he noted with relish during his first campaign that he could shoot someone on
Fifth Avenue without losing votes, it was the sound of a depraved man being
granted his fondest wish. That being so, there was never a question that his
appetite for being unaccountable to anyone would eventually extend beyond
voters to the law itself. “Infinite crimes if I want to do them” is typically
the endgame with a sociopath.
Strangely,
major American media outlets don’t want you to know this.
Well
… no, that’s not fair. They do want you to know it, but
they’re itchy about their role in having to relay the information. Reporters
and commentators outside the right-wing bubble have grown understandably
anxious about providing a platform to a man who lies like he breathes, smears his
enemies without compunction, and has been known to incite violence when he
doesn’t get his way. Since January 6, an ethic has developed within mainstream
media that it’s irresponsible to “normalize” Trump by granting him airtime,
especially when he’s speaking live.
For
evidence, look no further than the aftermath of the Iowa caucuses, when CNN and
MSNBC each declined to air the entirety of his victory speech. (Trump reacted
to the snub predictably.)
That was no oversight, as anchors Jake Tapper and Rachel
Maddow, respectively, made clear. Non-conservative networks have made a
judgment that lending their megaphones to Trump, even when the news clearly
points toward doing so, will do more harm civically than good.
We
can ignore the whining about that judgment from Trump’s sycophants, especially
those like Marco Rubio who foresaw the
terrible damage he would do to American politics and now have the gall to whine about
the media acting in
an “authoritarian” way as they struggle to cope with it. But the fact
that Rubio is a soulless enabler of the infinite-crimes candidate shouldn’t
distract us from the fact that media blackouts of Trump have outlived their
usefulness.
It’s
time to re-platform the worst public figure in the United States.
***
The
colossal amount of media coverage Trump enjoyed in 2016 has been a sore spot
among his critics for years.
To
those of us who oppose him sincerely, from classically liberal conservatives to
every ideological shade of Democrat, it remains unfathomable that cable news
lavished $2
billion worth of free airtime on him that cycle, erasing his
opponents’ spending advantage. Every Never Trumper worth his or her salt can
quote from memory Les
Moonves’ infamous quip about that race: “It may not be good for
America, but it’s damn good for CBS.”
Those
who oppose him insincerely, i.e., anti-anti-Trump Republicans, will also
eagerly complain about the media’s role in promoting him during his first run
for president. That’s not because they’re truly aggrieved by it, it’s because
they’re forever looking for excuses
to keep voting GOP—and scapegoating the media allows them to absolve the
party for having committed itself so slavishly to such a lowlife.
You
can see, then, why media executives might be reluctant this time to let Trump
rant at length on their dime: Most of the country resents them, sincerely or
otherwise, for having allowed him to do so once before. Even absent that public
pressure, I’d like to believe those executives retain enough of a civic
conscience that they wouldn’t repeat their terrible mistake of 2016 if they
could do it over again. De-platforming Trump after January 6, insofar as the
daily news cycle has allowed them to do so, is their attempt at atonement.
The problem is that it’s backfiring.
Eight
years ago Trump was … not “normal,” certainly, but more normal than he is now.
Amid occasional digressions about issuing illegal orders to the military
and expecting
them to obey, he spoke about the wall, bringing jobs back to America, and
“draining the swamp” of special interests. He hadn’t staged any coups or
instigated any riots. Casual voters could plausibly (sort of?) digest the
endless media coverage of his candidacy, thrill to the excitement of his
freewheeling candidacy, and conclude that he was “normal” enough to risk
trusting with the presidency.
Post-coup,
post-riot, the media has decided that carrying his public remarks live and
focusing obsessively on his daily provocations risks repeating that mistake and
producing a similar outcome. But by doing so they’re inadvertently blinding
those same casual voters to the fact that Trump is much more
sinister a figure today than he was eight years ago. They’ve overcorrected—and
ironically, despite their good intentions, they’re helping him get elected
again.
The
possibility that many voters don’t realize that Trump is deep into the Captain
Queeg stage of his deterioration has been a topic of this newsletter
before. Most Americans don’t read Truth Social and probably don’t pay much
attention to politics unless it’s in their face 24/7, as Trump’s candidacy was
in 2016. If you want to educate them about his descent into Queeg-dom and scare
them off of trusting him again, more coverage is the way to go, not less.
Especially since, in 2024, voters are far more deeply immersed in “bespoke
realities” than they were eight years ago. Puncturing those realities
will take considerable effort. There’s no time to waste.
McKay
Coppins made a similar point a few days ago at The Atlantic when
he encouraged his readers to attend a Trump rally if they get the chance. The
former president is somehow lamer and scarier than he used to
be, neither of which should wear well with swing voters given a good hard dose
of it:
If one thing has noticeably changed since
2016, it’s how the audience reacts to Trump. During his first campaign, the
improvised material was what everyone looked forward to, while the written
sections felt largely like box-checking. But in Mason City, the off-script
riffs—many of which revolved around the 2020 election being stolen from him,
and his personal sense of martyrdom—often turned rambly, and the crowd seemed
to lose interest. At one point, a woman in front of me rolled her eyes and
muttered, “He’s just babbling now.” She left a few minutes later, joining a
steady stream of early exiters, and I wondered then whether even the most loyal
Trump supporters might be surprised if they were to see their leader speak in
person.
My own takeaway from the event was that
there’s a reason Trump is no longer the cultural phenomenon he was in 2016.
Yes, the novelty has worn off. But he also seems to have lost the instinct for
entertainment that once made him so interesting to audiences. He relies on a
shorthand legible only to his most dedicated followers, and his tendency to get
lost in rhetorical cul-de-sacs of self-pity and anger wears thin. This doesn’t
necessarily make him less dangerous. There is a rote quality now to his darkest
rhetoric that I found more unnerving than when it used to command wall-to-wall
news coverage.
Finding
a balance between giving Trump too much attention and unintentionally
suppressing evidence of his authoritarianism can be difficult even for us
at The Dispatch. Until fairly recently, we worried about
over-covering him, not wanting to amplify every outrageous utterance he made
when he was only one of several Republican presidential candidates. (Allowances
were made for certain Trump-obsessed newsletters, of course.) Lately, as he’s
moved toward a runaway victory in the primary, we’re trying to take care not
to under-cover him. He’s the odds-on
favorite to be the next president; when he rants about his
constitutional power to commit infinite crimes, voters need to know.
That’s
not to say that them knowing will necessarily foil his plans, especially in the
Republican primary. It’s a terrible indictment of Trump’s party that he could
publicly demand total immunity for any misconduct he might commit as president
five days before New Hampshire votes and rest assured that neither of his
remaining opponents will complain about it—and that, if they do, voters might
hold the complaint against them more so than against him.
But
making sure voters know the stakes of the election will at least make it hard
for the candidate and his many enablers to pretend that it’s about something
other than Trump craving monarchical powers for himself. When Rand Paul was
asked today whether a would-be strongman should be able to commit crimes with
impunity as president, the ostensible “libertarian” pathetically
sniffed that he wasn’t familiar with the legal niceties of the
argument and therefore couldn’t comment. (Paul once
spoke for 12 hours against Barack Obama’s theoretical power to drone
American citizens, Jonah Goldberg reminds us.)
That sort of dodge about Trump’s worst impulses will be standard operating
procedure for Republicans all the way into fall. The more coverage those
impulses receive, the more difficult the dodging will be.
Fortunately,
the candidate himself will have no problem making it difficult for them.
I wrote
in November that, if I were advising Trump, I’d keep him off the trail
as much as possible and make sure his public remarks are tightly
scripted—better to keep the focus of the coming election on Biden’s presidency.
When Trump delivered an uncharacteristically magnanimous victory speech a few
nights ago in Iowa, I thought back to that column. His advisors knew he’d have
a big audience for the moment and cannily made sure that he was on his best
behavior while reintroducing himself to America.
But
alas, January 15, 2024, was not the day Trump finally became president.
Eventually his desire for infinite crimes would express itself and it did, just
three days later. If the media covers episodes like this one as abundantly as
they covered him in 2016, he’ll provide the rope to hang his candidacy himself.
Maybe?
***
I’d
like to believe that turning the 2024 election into a referendum on Trump will
produce the same result as the last referendum on him did in 2020. I do think
it’s Biden’s best bet at victory, and the White House appears
to agree. But I’m not as confident as I wish.
Earlier
this week, David Frum asked
a question at The Atlantic that’s been on my mind
every day for, oh, about eight years now.
What kind of people are Americans, anyway?
Trump has made clear, without illusions, that his ballot issue in 2024 is to
rehabilitate and ratify his attempt to overturn the election of 2020. He is
running to protect himself from the legal consequences of that attempt. But
even more fundamentally, he is running to justify himself for attempting it. In
2016, Trump opponents warned that he might refuse to leave office if defeated.
In 2024, Trump himself is arguing that he was right to refuse to leave office
when defeated, and he is asking Americans to approve his refusal.
If he should return to the presidency in
2025, we have no reason to expect him to leave in 2029. So maybe the issue on
the ballot in 2024 is not a choice at all, but a much more open-ended question.
We know who Biden is. We know who Trump is. Who are we?
It
matters enormously who wins the election, of course. But even in the best-case
scenario, the candidate of “infinite crimes” will come very close to
winning and will claim the support of a near-majority of voters. I don’t know
how anyone can have the same respect for this country that they had 10 years
ago having seen now what half the population will tolerate or condone.
That’s
another reason why the media should ramp up its coverage of Trump. We can’t
insist on a particular result in a democracy, but we can insist on public
clarity about the implications of the choice. If America is really going to do
this, let there be no feeble excuses afterward that the poor naifs of the
general electorate weren’t fully informed about what
they were choosing because they were underserved by the press.
Republicans
asked for this. They’ve been asking
for it since 2016. But robust coverage of Trump’s illiberal fantasies this
year will ensure that no one can pretend otherwise in the aftermath.
Democrats
in Congress can aid the effort by using legislative power to call attention to
the frontrunner’s intentions. Last month, our friend David
French wondered why no serious effort had been made in Washington to
reform the Insurrection Act, the statute that grants the president
frighteningly broad authority to deploy U.S. troops internally due to civil
unrest. Biden’s party controls the Senate; there’s nothing stopping them from
introducing a bill to revisit the Act and limit the commander-in-chief’s power
to institute de facto martial law.
If
Republicans in the House and/or Senate resist the effort, that in itself is a
major news story for the media to cover. There’s no logical reason that
“constitutional conservatives” from the so-called party of small government
should side with the executive’s prerogative to oppress the people through
military means. If bigwigs in Trump’s party insist on doing so anyway, they
should spend every day of the rest of their miserable lives being asked why. On
camera.
And
yet, having said all of that, we also should recognize that there will still be
times when the responsible thing to do is to not cover Trump,
even at his worst moments. Especially at his worst moments.
I
believed then—and still believe now—that social media platforms like Twitter
and Facebook were right to suspend Trump’s accounts after the rampage at the
Capitol began on January 6. When a man is willing and able to incite a violent
uprising against the government, the private actor that’s loaned him its
bullhorn is entitled—obliged, even—to snatch it away before he does more
damage.
There
may be another moment like that this year. More than one, conceivably.
If
he’s convicted of any of the crimes he’s been charged with, if he’s
disqualified from office by the Supreme Court under the 14th Amendment, if he
loses the election to Joe Biden fair and square, he’ll screech like a wounded
animal and egg on his disciples to avenge him in whatever manner they see fit.
We all know it, very much including the millions of Republicans who intend to
vote for him in November regardless. Trump is an insurrectionist, no matter how
uncomfortable that word might make them. But it’s not that they don’t realize
it. They just don’t care.
When, not if, his most ardent supporters undertake to commit what will feel like infinite crimes on his behalf, the media will again have to choke off his access to their airwaves for the sake of public safety. But until then, they’re doing him a favor by treating him recurrently as beneath their dignity as good Americans to cover. Sunlight turns out to be the best disinfectant after all. And it’ll take a lot of it to decontaminate a political movement as toxic as this.
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