By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
Donald Trump isn’t normally thought of as a
consensus-builder, but in one sense that’s exactly what he is. Many of Trump’s
most ardent fans and foes alike believe he is the leader of a political
movement with a clear and defined set of principles and goals. They disagree
only on whether that agenda is good or bad.
The tendency to cast Trump as a tool of the ideological
right serves the purposes of both sides. The right needs to believe Trump is a
warrior for its causes to justify its support for him, and the left wants to
believe the same to justify its opposition.
I’ll concede that this is not an outlandish view. It’s
certainly how he ran in 2016, when he promised in many respects to be an
instrument of the Republican base’s will. He even quite brilliantly agreed to a
list of potential Supreme Court appointments compiled by the Heritage
Foundation and the Federalist Society to reassure skeptical conservatives that
he would be their servant. And since he left office, Trump has frequently told
right-wing groups that he remains their loyal champion. So maybe you can’t blame
people for believing him.
Or maybe you can. While the notion that Trump is an
ideological conservative isn’t outlandish, it is outdated. It’s certainly true
that if Trump is reelected, he will do things that please the GOP and
conservatives. But let’s not get the causality backward: His supporters will
like what he does —and his enemies will hate it—because Trump did it. They’ll
look up the arguments later.
Right-wing apologists’ attempt to construct an
intellectually consistent Trumpism is one of the oldest stories of the Trump
era. And time and again, Trump has beclowned them for it.
Consider the recent humiliation of Kevin Roberts, the
Heritage Foundation’s president. Roberts has worked tirelessly to turn the
storied think tank into the ideological avant-garde of Trumpism. Along with a
who’s-who of former Trump administration officials and conservative groups, he
launched Project 2025 as both a
playbook for another Trump term and a how-to manual for the true believers the
group is screening to staff the administration.
Appearing on MAGA goon Steve Bannon’s War Room podcast
last week, Roberts told
a guest host (Bannon being busy serving a stint in federal prison) that he is
leading a “second American revolution” that will “remain bloodless if the left
allows it to be.” This typically dopey radical posturing invited a wave of
legitimate criticism, annoying Trump.
“I know nothing about Project 2025,” the former president
declared
on Truth Social. “I have no idea who is behind it. I disagree with some of the
things they’re saying and some of the things they’re saying are absolutely
ridiculous and abysmal. Anything they do, I wish them luck, but I have nothing
to do with them.”
Never mind that this is a demonstrably audacious lie:
Project 2025 has enough ties to Trump that it might as well rent space at
Mar-a-Lago. The point is that Trump rewarded Roberts for his efforts by
publicly disavowing them.
Or consider the Trump campaign’s success in softening the
GOP platform’s position on abortion. For years, dedicated opponents of abortion
rights rationalized their support for Trump with the conviction that he would
champion their cause. Their gamble paid off with the Supreme Court’s
overturning of Roe v. Wade. But now abortion is a political problem
for Trump, so he has changed his position again. As president, Trump supported
a 20-week abortion ban but now says that the issue should be left entirely
to the states and that the abortion pill mifepristone should remain legal
nationwide.
The leading contenders to serve as Trump’s running mate
responded by changing their positions, too. “I think our platform has to
reflect our nominee,” longtime pro-life Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida explained
over the weekend. It’s a tactically defensible position, but it illuminates the
absurdity of claiming the party supports Trump because he reflects the party.
The only platform Trump cares about is whichever one he happens to be standing
on.
It’s not just abortion, either. The platform
also dropped any reference to gun policy, referencing the Second Amendment
only briefly in the preamble where it described protecting “our fundamental
freedoms, including freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the right to
keep and bear arms.”
Trump has always wanted the party to be his pool of
Narcissus, reflecting his personal glory and dominance. That’s why he supported
candidates who hewed to his lie that the 2020 election was stolen, preferring
that the party lose with loyalists than win with truth-tellers. That’s why he
no longer cares about the Federalist Society, which produced judges who
rejected his false election claims. Oh, and last month, the guy who infamously
called for a ban on Muslim immigration said he wants to give every foreign-born
graduate of a U.S. college a green card.
The problem with the search for an intellectually serious
Trumpism is that Trump has no use for ideas except as expedients of his
ambition. The instrumentalism that paved the way for Trump sought to make him
the right’s tool. Instead, it made a lot of right-wingers look like tools.
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