By Dan McLaughlin
Monday, June 09, 2025
There’s never a good time to launch a riot against
the duly-elected government of the United States, and rioters tend to be
malicious actors and/or idiots. There’s always some of them who are just
interested in mischief for its own sake, or are revolutionaries searching for the
eternal high of heightening the contradictions.
That said, the protesters against Trump immigration and
deportation policy who chose to cross the line from peaceful protest to riot
were especially foolish. First of all, polls have regularly shown that the
public is behind a policy of strict border enforcement and significant
deportations, but uneasy with how Trump is going about it. The best possible
remedy for Trump is to recast the other side of that debate as the aggressors —
a role they are eagerly embracing.
This goes beyond the politics of immigration, however, to
the calculus of a riot. Unless you are a true revolutionary, rioting only makes
even the most primal sort of sense if you think the law can be scoffed at with
impunity. It’s a way of demonstrating the impotence of authority in the face of
the raw power of the street — the eternal enemy of public order and small-c
conservatism. Long experience has taught the inhabitants of California to think
this way. But after a decade of Donald Trump on the national stage, this is a
catastrophic misreading of the man and his incentives.
In spite of a spate of press hysteria over his deployment
of federal power at Lafayette Square — which led D.C. to be gun-shy about
accepting help defending the Capitol on January 6, 2021 — the dominant story of
mid-2020 was that Trump folded like a cheap suit in the face of civil disorder
across the nation’s cities. He was then in the midst of a difficult reelection
campaign while juggling a global pandemic and for various reasons did not feel
empowered to come down hard on disorder, at cost both to his political brand
and to the rights of innocent Americans who saw their homes and businesses
torched. Today, there’s a meme circulating on Wall Street about tariff fights —
TACO, an abbreviation for “Trump Always Chickens Out.” Democrats have stupidly adopted this as a taunt at
Trump, without considering the downsides of goading the president into taking
actions they claim to oppose.
Now, Trump is following through on nationalizing the
California National Guard and putting them seriously to work in restoring order
over the impotent protests of California Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles
Mayor Karen Bass. Anybody who read the situation and the man could have told
them this would happen. Yes, there’s some truth in the TACO taunt: Trump
doesn’t much like standing up to people who can fight back, and he often
blusters his way into positions he can’t or won’t back up. But Trump has no downside
here. He knows he was elected to restore some basic, commonsense ideas that are
overwhelmingly popular like public order in the streets, and that Newsom, Bass,
and Kamala Harris are about the least sympathetic adversaries possible. He’s
also just over four months into his term; it’s not 2020 anymore. A new
president responds to challenges such as this one not only with an eye to the
situation, but also with an eye on the tone set for the remaining three-plus
years. Why did Ronald Reagan come down so hard on the air traffic controller
strike? Partly out of principle but also partly to send a message: There’s a
new sheriff in town, and you’re not messing with him. The public-employee
unions got the message; so did the Soviets and Congress. Reagan meant what he
said and was prepared to go to the mattresses.
All of the incentives for Trump, against people burning
Waymos and wearing keffiyehs and waving Mexican flags, point in the direction
of doing the same. Before you try to use leverage against an opponent, you
should first consider whether your acts are received by him as pressure or as
a gift. Trump very obviously views disorder in the streets of Los Angeles,
against federal authority, and under foreign flags, as a gift. You have to be a
special kind of stupid to hand him that. But nobody ever said rioters were
smart people.
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