By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, September 13, 2024
Donald Trump is a funny kind of patriot.
He loves America—except for the cities, the people
who live in the cities, about half of the states, the universities,
professional sports leagues, Hollywood, Silicon Valley, Wall Street, the legal
system, immigrants, the culture. He thinks the Capitol Police are murderers and
that the FBI is a gestapo, that the government is an illegitimate junta
maintained through election fraud, that the January 6 rioters are political
prisoners, that the nation is a ruin, that it is “failed.” And when it fell to
him to explain to Tuesday’s debate audience why he should be president, he
spent most of his time repeating the praise of Hungarian autocrat Viktor Orbán.
Trump’s enemies are all Americans, his friends are all
foreign dictators, and his money lives in Dubai and Indonesia.
Some nationalist.
Trump lives in a very strange little bubble: His world is
Palm Beach, a handful of golf courses and hotels, and Fox News. The smallness
of his frame of reference is a problem for him: Trump’s remarks about the 2017
fiasco in Charlottesville really are routinely misrepresented, and he is right
to try to correct the record, but going on ABC and insisting that the story had
been “debunked” by “Jesse”—and expecting the ABC debate audience to know that
he meant Jesse Watters of Fox News—is just one example of Trump’s inability to
speak to any constituency beyond the one he already has: the constituency that
is holding him hostage.
Presidential politics in September is about addition, not
division or subtraction, and Trump did not add to his coalition on debate
night. He doesn’t know how. Trump’s hardcore supporters are a big enough group
to carry him through the Republican primary, which is dominated by a tiny
number of extreme and unrepresentative partisans, but they are not a large
enough group to carry him to victory on Election Day. Still, they demand
constant entertainment and servicing—and Trump is too afraid of them to do anything
else.
Trump has proven over and over that his rump of
right-wing rage monkeys cannot deliver at the polls, not only in the 2020
presidential election he lost to Joe Biden but also in the 2018 midterms (in
which Republicans lost not only the House but also seven governorships, more
than 350 state legislative seats, and control of six state legislative
chambers) and the Senate-race
fiasco in Georgia in 2020-21, in which both Republican senators got
tossed out on their ears, with Trump actively sabotaging voter-turnout efforts
and turning control of the Senate over to the Democrats, and, specifically, to
tiebreaking Vice President Kamala Harris, who made the most of the opportunity.
Trump’s vision of America as a failed and corrupt society
has deep roots in radical populism and its right-wing variants. For white-power
cranks such as David Eden Lane (whose “14 Words” pledge
retains currency in corners of Trump’s world), loyalty to the United States is treason
to the higher cause, in his case white nationalism: “Our race is our nation,”
was his slogan. Trump is not that kind of a racist (he is a barstool bigot
without the excuse of alcohol) but his brand of anti-Americanism runs parallel
to that of white nationalists such as David Duke and Nick Fuentes (a neo-Nazi
whom Trump was courting
as recently as 2022) in that it holds that America cannot be a good or
decent country if the wrong kind of people—especially dusky-hued ones such as
Kamala Harris—hold political power.
Trump’s insistence that the country went from gold-plated
utopia on his last day in office to Third World hellscape on Joe Biden’s first
day in office is a confession, though he doesn’t intend it as one. If all that
Trump was able to do as president could be undone in a moment simply because
the other party happened to win an election—and Democrats will do that, from
time to time—then what did he really accomplish that was worth a squirt of
piss? Biden is a doddering non-entity and has a Republican-controlled House
limiting his scope of action—and yet he still has been able to reverse all
of Trump’s supposed victories?
That is, of course, nonsense. As Trump himself noted, the
Biden administration kept in place many of the policies it inherited from the
Trump administration, especially the dumbest of them, such as tariffs.
Ultimately, this isn’t about policy at all—it is about tribalism and Trump’s
superstitious belief that the country cannot thrive unless the highest office
is held by him or by someone he approves of. This isn’t a political belief—it
is idolatry.
The United States of America has had all kinds of
presidents: great men such as Lincoln, vigilant patriots such as Eisenhower,
scoundrels such as Nixon, would-be tyrants such as Wilson and Trump. And,
throughout it all, America has been America, for better and for worse. The
president isn’t the country—he isn’t even the government, only the chief
executive of one branch of one level of American government.
Trump cannot see that, because his anti-Americanism and
his narcissism sit on the same foundation: the belief that the most important
entity in the world is Donald J. Trump.
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