By Nick Catoggio
Friday, September 06, 2024
A perspicacious pundit noted
recently that this is the tightest presidential race in 20 years. If you
doubt it, take a peek at
the polling margins between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris in the seven
states that will decide the election.
Typically, we have a frontrunner by Labor Day, and so
this is traditionally the time in the cycle that the underdog’s base begins to
cope with the prospect of defeat. One form of cope is of the “keep hope alive”
variety: The polls are skewed, the media is biased, the candidate has made
mistakes but has time to correct them. We can still win.
Another form is rationalizing defeat as somehow good for
the party long-term. “If Republicans Want to Win, They Need Trump to Lose—Big,”
Politico’s Jonathan Martin argued
a few days ago, not entirely persuasively. Certainly, Reagan Republicans
would benefit from a Democratic landslide this fall that sours the right on
nominating Trumpist wackos going forward. That’s the Never
Trump case for Harris in a nutshell.
But partisan Republicans generally? It seems to me that
if they want to win, they should, er, want to win.
The third form of cope is fingerpointing. The likelier it
becomes that your candidate will lose, the more reason you have to begin
pre-spinning that loss as some political enemy’s fault. Because there’s no
frontrunner in this year’s race, both parties stand a solid chance of
losing—and so we should expect activists on both sides to start floating trial
balloons about who’s really to blame for their defeat.
And that is, in fact, what we’re seeing. On the left and
right, cope-phase fingerpointing has begun.
Blame the media.
If Harris loses this race, I expect the average
Democratic partisan will lay most of the blame where
it belongs. That’s on Joe Biden, who shouldn’t have run for reelection amid
spiraling anxiety about his age and whose party had to relearn the hard way
that high inflation is too burdensome for most incumbent administrations to
overcome.
Harris will take a few knocks, too, especially if she
loses Pennsylvania after snubbing that state’s governor in choosing a running
mate. She’s run a vapid,
overly
cautious campaign; some will argue a bolder nominee might have prevailed.
But the left will also have to answer a question that
will haunt Never Trump conservatives: How did the voters of this country reach
a point where they preferred a second ride on the crazy train to four years
with a sane, young-ish establishment Democrat? How is Donald Trump still
politically viable in the year of our Lord 2024?
One theory that’s kicking around this week has to do with
“sanewashing.”
“Sanewashing” was coined
by New Republic writer Parker Molloy to describe the media’s habit
of cleaning up Trump’s disjointed ramblings to make them more intelligible. As
an example, take a stiff drink and try to make your way through the transcript of
what he said on Thursday when asked how he intends to make child care more
affordable as president. It’s impenetrable. The answer boils down to “tariffs,”
but no summary can do it justice.
The Associated
Press headline about his response was as anodyne as could be: “Trump
suggests tariffs can help solve rising child care costs in a major economic
speech.” The story itself is appropriately skeptical about the economics
involved, but there’s no hint that he struggled to sustain a lucid thought.
This sort of “sanewashing” is a threat to democracy,
Molloy writes. “By continually reframing Trump’s incoherent and often dangerous
rhetoric as conventional political discourse, major news outlets are failing in
their duty to inform the public and are instead providing cover for
increasingly erratic behavior from a former—and potentially future—president.”
No argument on my end. “The media got Trump elected” is a
hobby horse of Never Trumpers dating
back to 2016, in fact. I wrote an
entire column identifying Trump’s mental, ahem, “fragility” as the elephant
in the room of this election less than a month ago. As a matter of good
journalistic practice, Molloy’s advice should be heeded. A reporter’s job is to
tell the truth, and if the truth is that a candidate still can’t discuss policy
coherently in his third campaign for president, that needs to be noted.
But let’s be real. Obnoxious though it may be,
“sanewashing” isn’t why Trump is competitive with Harris.
“I didn’t say that it was,” Molloy might reply. Okay, but
the New Republic piece is part of a chorus of liberals alleging media
bias in Trump’s favor that’s growing louder as Election Day creeps closer and
Harris fails to pull away. (The New York Times is a favored target.) It’s not
that the press is pro-Trump, they insist, it’s that they’ve let their ethic of
impartiality lead them to “false
balance” between Trump and Harris. They’re normalizing his
insanity with techniques like “sanewashing,” which is leading voters to
treat him as an acceptable option for president.
It all feels like a very 2016 argument to me. Show me the
voter in 2024 who’s sat through eight years of Trump and is still thinking of
voting for him, yet might be shaken from their stupor if only the media offered
them more accurate transcripts of his goony mumblings about tariff-ing our way
to free child care.
The man attempted a coup. He was impeached twice. If he
wins in November, he might end up planning his presidential transition from
a prison cell. If he loses, practically everyone expects him to
freak out and reject the results. There’s no “sanewashing” him at this
point. Even if there were, he’s hellbent on getting dirty again every time the
press washes him clean. His convention acceptance speech this year was supposed
to be a short, tight address reflecting on the attempt on his life; instead, he
ended up babbling like a loon for an
extra hour before a national TV audience, finishing after midnight.
He doesn’t seem much worse cognitively today than he was
in his first campaign, frankly. (Not coincidentally, Molloy has been on the
“sanewashing” beat since
at least 2020.) Now, as then, he has a chronic, incurable case of mental
diarrhea. The press can either lead every story with the headline “MORE
DIARRHEA FROM TRUMP” or it can take as a given that the public understands he
has “the trots” between his ears and focus on his plans.
Or, I suppose, it can treat his psychological fitness as
a distinct
sub-topic of election coverage, not unlike how it did with occasional
stories about Joe Biden’s age and mental wherewithal before the first debate.
But the Biden precedent is underwhelming—there was lots
of “sanewashing” there too—and I think the perception that the media
despises Trump is sufficiently widely held that a “Trump is nuts” beat will be
dismissed by most as just another form of bias.
And so all of this feels like cope. Although Molloy is
right on the merits, the left’s carping about the press while Harris struggles
to put Trump away reeks of an attempt to shift blame from Democrats and onto
journalists for somehow failing to keep him outside the Overton window. It’s
painful for liberals to accept that a boorish right-winger might have vacuumed
up enough of their working-class base to win national elections. And it’s
intensely painful for all of us to accept that there are enough traitors to
America’s civic tradition in this country to trust an authoritarian like Trump
with power—again.
The left didn’t fail. The center didn’t fail. It must be
that the media failed.
Blame the Nazis.
We all know how the average right-wing partisan will
process defeat. Trump is already laying the groundwork for it. At a rally in
North Carolina last month, he went so far as to say
that “our primary focus is not to get out the vote, it’s to make sure that they
don’t cheat. Because we have all the votes you need.” That must be the first
time in political history that a candidate has downplayed the importance of
turnout.
He wasn’t speaking rhetorically, either: The GOP really
is more focused on ballot-counting than ballot-casting this year. “Why is the
RNC building out hundreds of thousands of people for an ‘election integrity
project’ instead of hundreds of thousands of precinct captains and GOTV [get
out the vote] people focused on actually convincing and turning out voters?”
one Republican operative wondered
to NBC News recently. “It’s because it’s much easier to yell ‘rigged’ when
[Trump] inevitably loses another f—ing winnable race because he has no idea how
to make a case for his own vision.”
Trump-loving Republicans will know whom to blame for a
defeat. But what about traditional right-wingers, the anti-anti-Trump
conservatives who still value their membership in the Republican tribe for some
reason? They know that his “rigged election” nonsense is nonsense, yet they
also know that most other members of the tribe won’t tolerate them blaming him
for losing. So whom do they blame?
In a word, Nazis.
Amid the disgust at Tucker Carlson’s friendly
chat with a World War II revisionist this week, some conservative
commentators speculated that Tucker and his minions secretly … want Trump to
lose. “Tucker Carlson wants Kamala elected so that he can remain relevant,”
columnist Caroline
Glick theorized. “To this end, he is pushing Jew-hatred on MAGA. He wants a
Republican civil war that will bring Kamala to power. A Kamala presidency will
also institutionalize anti-semitism in the U.S., which Carlson supports.”
Journalist Abigail Shrier
agreed. “Tucker Carlson is a very bright man,” she wrote. “He has the
largest conservative podcast in the country, and eight weeks before a
presidential election, he is approvingly boosting Nazi apologists. The Occam’s
Razor explanation? He wants Kamala Harris to win.” Populist “influencer” John
Cardillo went so far as to say that there’s no other possible
explanation.
Isn’t there, though? The actual Occam’s Razor explanation
for Carlson’s behavior is “he likes Nazi apologists and wishes to support
them,” as Crooked Media’s Jane Coaston put it.
Simple as that. There’s no elaborate nationalist plan to tank Donald Trump’s
chances for the sake of heightening the contradictions between the right and
the left.
Trump is their plan.
And rather than face that truth forthrightly, respectable
right-wingers who find themselves now making common cause electorally
with Nazi apologists are resorting to desperate cope by pretending that
there’s no common cause at all. The mainstream right wants to be
governed by Republicans, the Nazis want to be governed by Democrats. Tucker is
trying to throw the election.
Tucker Carlson is many things, but he’s not a moron.
Whatever benefit his niche of the right might gain from Republicans being
radicalized by a Harris presidency pales in comparison to the influence he
could wield as a confidant of President Donald Trump. If you want the U.S. out
of NATO and the Far East; if you want cozy relations with fascist regimes like
Russia; if you want a sustained effort to rid America of “invaders” from
Mexico; if you want to mainstream right-wing kookery of all stripes; then you’re
far better off with Trump winning now and normalizing those things in a second
term than you are gambling that the right might go full Nazi as part of a
backlash to the Harris administration.
After all, who’s to say that Republican voters wouldn’t
lose their appetite for authoritarianism if their hero falls short again in
November, as so many Beltway conservatives are
hoping? With Trump gone, Tucker could find himself relegated to an
increasingly unpopular fringe by 2028. The postliberal plan, as it was in 2020,
is to win power now by hook or by crook and dare the regnant liberal order to
pry it from their hands.
J.D. Vance isn’t a moron, either. If Carlson were as
poisonous politically as Glick and Shrier (and I) wished he were, one would
think the GOP’s vice presidential nominee would feel a duty to cut ties with
him as a matter of electoral self-interest. He hasn’t. “Senator Vance doesn’t
believe in guilt-by-association cancel culture,” a spokesman said
when asked whether he’ll ditch Tucker following his interview with historical
revisionist Darryl Cooper. The spokesman did allow that his boss doesn’t share
Cooper’s views—but it turns out that Vance follows
Cooper on social media from his personal account. So who knows?
The Republican ticket is so unconcerned by how voters
might view its warm relations with the pro- and anti-anti-Nazi right that Vance
reportedly recorded
an interview with Carlson on Thursday after the uproar
over the Cooper segment. And why wouldn’t he? Tucker is his
political patron.
So where is this idea coming from that Carlson is going
to, let alone trying to, blow the election for Republicans with his antics? My
guess is that Trump and Vance believe that keeping him in their corner is
crucial to making sure that all elements of the Republican base remain eager to
turn out on Election Day. They seem to believe that the just-asking-questions
Nazi-apologist contrarian niche of populism will take greater offense if they
attack Tucker than swing voters will if they hug him. Are we sure they’re
wrong?
Insisting that they must be wrong reeks of cope. It’s
wishful thinking.
“Carlson’s actions and statements are a direct threat to
[Trump’s] campaign and a frightening effort to mainstream the hatred of Jews,” Jonathan
Tobin wrote this week. “He must be put in his place, and condemned by Trump
and Vance, if the Republicans are to defeat Harris.” He will not be put in his
place or emphatically condemned; I doubt Trump will even offer the sort of half-hearted
if-you-insist disavowal that he made in 2016 about David Duke’s
endorsement. Tobin knows as well as I do that the only moral criterion Trump
has in assessing other people is whether they like him. And despite all of
that, he might win anyway—which would have dark implications for tolerance of
antisemitism in America generally and on the right specifically.
But in case he loses, traditional conservatives like
Tobin, Glick, and Shrier are getting a jump on offloading blame for his defeat
onto the dregs of the postliberal right. The GOP after Trump will be an orgy of
recriminations; it’s not too early for decent people to start discrediting the
Tucker faction by seeding the idea that the Nazis cost Trump the election. All
I ask of them as they forge ahead inexplicably with this wretched coalition is
honesty about the state of it. They’re working with fascists toward a common
goal of getting Donald Trump elected, each in the belief that their faction
will be the one that has the president’s ear.
One of them will be wrong.
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