By Nick Catoggio
Tuesday, August 05, 2025
We shouldn’t be thinking about the post-Trump era at a
moment when the Trump era is only just hitting
its authoritarian stride, with well over 80 percent of the president’s
second term still to go. There are more urgent topics for a daily politics
newsletter to take up.
But I am thinking about it. Specifically, I’m thinking
that one of the most obnoxious things about the post-Trump political
environment will be having to listen to Republican officials who bit their
tongues for more than a decade finally confess to the moral and ethical qualms
they’ve harbored since, oh, June 2015.
Gutless, hypocritical, careerist cretins. The MAGA
diehard who follows Donald Trump blindly offends me less than the coward who
does so despite seeing clearly; the former at least doesn’t pretend to be
respectable. When the time comes, the president’s critics should receive the
latter’s belated attempt at rehabilitation with every bit of contempt it
deserves.
Here, via Mona
Charen, is a non-exhaustive list of what the “good Republicans” in the
party are quietly tolerating at this very moment:
Trump has solicited the gift of a
jet from a foreign potentate. He has prostituted his office to the highest
bidder by floating meme coins. He has pardoned more than 1,500 rioters who
attempted to steal the 2020 election for him. He has shaken down leading law
firms, media companies, and universities by threatening their livelihoods with
government action. He has removed protection from recent immigrants, like
Afghans, who risked their lives to ally with us. He has cut off humanitarian
aid to millions of the world’s poor without so much as a fig leaf by way of
explanation. He has appointed conspiracy nuts and kooks to key government posts
like the Department of Health and Human Services, the National Counterterrorism
Center, and as Director of National Intelligence. He has deported innocent
people to torture chambers in foreign countries. And always and everywhere, he
has annihilated truth, most recently by firing the commissioner of the Bureau
of Labor Statistics because her agency produced honest numbers rather than the
ones the president preferred.
There’ll be oh so many oh-so-sorry GOPers eager to admit
that things went a bit too far once the president is no longer around to punish
them for speaking up—or so I’m prone to telling myself.
Then it occurs to me (and this rarely occurs to me) that
I’m being too optimistic. The share of Republicans willing to repudiate any
part of Trump’s legacy, even the most disgusting parts, may be smaller than
anyone expects.
Take North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis, who announced his
retirement in June after the president threatened to primary him into oblivion.
“I look forward to having the pure freedom to call the balls and strikes as I
see fit,” Tillis warned
at the time, a hint that he would no longer rubber-stamp the usual populist
crapola being dished out by the White House. A month later, he turned around
and rubber-stamped Emil
Bove’s nomination for a federal judicial vacancy.
Having been “freed” from Trump’s wrath by quitting
electoral politics, the senator evidently decided that freedom is overrated.
It happened again last week when reporters asked him what
he thought of Trump firing the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics after a
disappointing jobs report. The best the newly liberated Tillis could do was this:
“If she was just fired because the president or whoever decided to fire the
director … because they didn’t like the numbers, they ought to grow up.”
They? There is no “they” in this party. “I have
directed my Team to fire this Biden Political Appointee, IMMEDIATELY,” Trump made
clear in a post on Friday announcing his decision. Tillis blamed “the
president or whoever” for the same reason that grassroots right-wingers
reliably say of Trump’s stupidest decisions that “whoever advised him to do
this should be fired.” To be a modern Republican, one must believe that the
president is never responsible—even when he’s explicitly claiming
responsibility.
Will that remain true once he’s no longer leading the
GOP? Or will a Republican establishment suddenly granted the “pure freedom to
call the balls and strikes” as it sees fit disclaim the sleaziest parts of his
legacy?
Precedent: Clinton.
One way to answer that is to look at what happened when
another party recently found itself saddled with the legacy of a disgraced,
impeached former president. How did Democrats handle the ugliest episode of
Bill Clinton’s tenure?
The same way political parties typically deal with things
they’d rather not talk about: They stopped talking about it and more or less
pretended like it never happened.
Clinton has been an ex-president for nearly 25 years, and
in that span there have been precious few moments when his party showed remorse
for defending him during the 1998 Monica Lewinsky scandal. He spoke on night
one of the 2000 Democratic convention, as the then-sitting president, and has
spoken at the same gathering every four years since.
His reputation within his party had recovered well enough
by 2008 for him to serve as lead surrogate for his wife’s presidential campaign
and in 2016 proved no impediment to her winning the Democratic nomination.
“Recover” might be the wrong word, frankly, as his approval rating skyrocketed
in 1998 when he was impeached. Liberals reframed the Clinton sex scandal as a
scandal about Republican
overreach,
which helped rally Democrats behind him, and they never looked back.
The only time serious misgivings about his stature in the
party have been expressed was during the #MeToo rage of 2017, when Sen. Kirsten
Gillibrand said that he should
have resigned over his affair while in office. But that’s the exception
that proves the rule: Gillibrand had no objections to Clinton campaigning and
hosting fundraisers for her between
2006 and 2010. She pretended to care about his sleaziness only once the
culture had changed enough to make it politically safe for her to care, and not
a moment sooner.
In sum, “this is old news, let’s just move on” has been
the default Democratic approach to his scandal since he left office—and it sure
has seemed to work. Establishment Republicans will try to emulate it after
Trump departs in hopes of deflecting similarly uncomfortable questions about
his behavior.
But the comparison isn’t apples-to-apples, is it?
To begin with, 9/11 helped spare Democrats from having to
reckon with Clinton’s legacy. His corruption wasn’t relevant to anything
anymore once terrorists attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The
safe assumption is that Republicans won’t get a similar reprieve in 2029, which
means they’ll have no excuse not to address Trump’s perceived
failures—particularly as they splinter into factions and compete to control the
direction of the party.
Trump will also end up engaging in more corruption, and
of a much greater variety, as president than Clinton did. He already has, per
Charen; one gets the sense that he’s only getting warmed up. The Democratic
defense of Lewinsky-gate, that it was a private matter and lying about sex
shouldn’t be a crime, ain’t gonna hack it to explain the GOP’s sustained
indifference to bribery, extortion, and gratuitous ruthlessness. This is much
worse than a zipper problem.
Meanwhile, Trump will assuredly leave office less popular
than Clinton was. That’s not all his fault: In hyper-polarized 21st century
America, no president will realistically touch the 66
percent approval that Clinton enjoyed in January 2001. But if the economic
trouble to come from Trump’s trade policies is as bad as many experts expect,
it’s more likely that he’ll retire with a rating in the 30s than one in the
50s. Republicans will need to answer for that.
All told, there are good reasons to believe that omerta
won’t work as well for them in papering over Trump’s scandals as it did for
Democrats in papering over Clinton’s. Hard political realities will require the
Thom Tillises of the party to concede that, ahem, “they” in the Trump White
House sure did do some scummy things that the next Republican leader must not
repeat.
At least, that’s what an optimist would say.
Trump exceptionalism.
What I would say is that the point about apples-to-apples
cuts both ways. The post-Trump right is sufficiently different from the
post-Clinton left that Republicans will feel greater pressure not to speak ill
of their disgraced ex-president than Democrats did. Their “pure freedom to call
the balls and strikes” as they see fit will be nothing of the sort.
That starts with the fact that there’s no such thing as a
“post-Trump right” until you-know-who heads off to the big golf course in the
sky. As long as he has breath in him, a retired Trump will remain the most
influential figure in the GOP and will aggressively punish any Republican who
repudiates him.
That wasn’t true of Clinton. He had many powerful friends
in his party who were willing to make trouble for his critics after he left
office, but they weren’t so powerful that they managed to scare Barack Obama
away from challenging Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination in 2008,
were they?
Clinton has never had anything like Trump’s cultish power
to vaporize a GOP official’s career by simply declaring him or her an enemy.
Any “good Republicans” who speak up against his corruption circa 2029 in order
to separate the party from it will find themselves anathematized by the
president—or, if he’s no longer around and kicking, by the many ambitious
demagogues on the right who are hoping to succeed him.
In a world without Donald Trump, will senators and
congressmen still need to worry about offending Donald Trump Jr.? My guess is
that they will. And if not him, certainly “fundamentalist
MAGA” types will eagerly demagogue rival factions for criticizing the
ex-president in hopes of winning the allegiance of his millions of supporters.
Another problem: In order for Republican officials to
feel “safe” criticizing Trump, some sort of major cultural shift will need to
take place that tilts the loyalty of Republican voters away from the president
and toward some competing authority. In Clinton’s case that shift was #MeToo,
which (briefly) made defending predatory men with the correct politics less
important than defending women who’d been preyed on. In Trump’s case the
shift would presumably involve right-wingers losing respect for postliberal
autocracy and regaining respect for liberal institutions.
How does that shift happen, realistically?
Compared to Trump, Clinton’s legacy as leader of his
party was easy for Democrats to repudiate and it still took them nearly 20
years to even semi-seriously try. He’s remembered now mainly for balancing
the budget, presiding over a robust economy, and of course Lewinsky-gate; many
leftists have little difficulty washing their hands of someone whose claims to
fame are centrism and lechery.
Trump, on the other hand, successfully upended 35 years
of ideological orthodoxy and (effectively) centuries of moral orthodoxy on the
right. He’s remade his party in his image, leading a successful revolution
whose core belief is contempt for any civic institution that would restrain his
power. He’s less a president or a political leader, as we’ve traditionally
understood those terms, than
a prophet. To criticize him as a member of his party is to commit apostasy,
which has never been true of Democrats and Bill Clinton.
I’m tempted to say that Republican voters would need to
be clinically deprogrammed in order to change that. If instead we’re forced to
rely on some organic cultural change to re-awaken their respect for liberal
institutions, the only thing that might do it is a Democrat becoming president
and running the same full-spectrum corrupt scams that Trump is running. And
even then, instead of renouncing corruption, the dismal grassroots right would
likely resolve to practice it twice as aggressively once they’re back in power
in the name of owning the libs.
Nothing Trump himself might do before leaving office in
2029 will offend Republican voters so much as to restore their appreciation for
checks and balances and disdain for a renegade executive. There are no
exceptions to that statement.
The ethos.
Which brings us to the last reason that post-Trump
Republicans probably won’t repudiate his scandals. The modern right believes as
fervently in how politics should be practiced as it does in which sort
of policies should be enacted. Truth be told, it doesn’t care much about
policy: Observe the sea change in polls of right-wing opinion every time the
president reverses himself on something like
arms to Ukraine.
Trumpism is an ethos more than it is an agenda or
program, one that I’m skeptical will evaporate once he loses control of the
GOP. The ethos is that ruthlessness on behalf of one’s cause is always the
proper course of action in politics. If you’re reluctant to show ruthlessness,
you’re simply not “fighting” the enemy.
That logic also worked to some degree for Clinton during
his 1998 impeachment. Democrats didn’t want to reward ruthless House
Republicans by agreeing that the then-president had behaved like a sleazebag,
so they rallied to him with similar ruthlessness, waving away his predation.
But it would go too far to say that the point of Democratic politics
writ large was to normalize acting ruthlessly.
We’re not going too far when we
say that of Trump’s GOP. And because we aren’t, any Republican who’s
considering denouncing the president’s corruption after he’s gone will be
risking a special betrayal. They won’t just be disparaging a right-wing hero by
doing so, they’ll be demonstrating their reluctance to “fight” the left as
political players on all sides scramble to define Trump’s legacy. That they
would be entirely correct in calling him a disgrace to the office is
irrelevant; this party has an ethos and it has nothing to do with what’s true
and what isn’t.
Criticizing former President Trump would be tantamount to
a Republican official believing that monuments to the Confederacy should be
torn down instead of, uh, reinstalled.
More so than the racial politics of the issue or the debate over America’s
historical heritage, taking sides with the left on the merits of a cultural
flashpoint like that one is considered per se evidence of an unwillingness to
“fight.” If that’s a problem, imagine how much more problematic it will be in
2029 for a Republican congressman or senator to sheepishly concede that Trump
was a bribe-taking, bullying lowlife.
Like Confederate statues, his legacy will be a monument
to right-wing ruthlessness. Party officials will be expected to do everything
possible to stop the left from tearing it down.
But if that’s too dark a note to end on, here’s a ray of
sunshine. Just because right-wingers won’t stand for their party telling the
truth about the president once he’s left office doesn’t mean they’ll tolerate
future leaders of their party behaving the way he did.
It’s easy to imagine a much less
charismatic Republican president, one who commands a fraction of the
personal loyalty that Trump does, being kept on a much shorter ethical leash by
his base. We aren’t seeing many tears shed about the “deep state” plot against
George Santos as he heads off to prison, are we? MAGA favorites like Steve
Bannon and Peter Navarro didn’t inspire much garment-rending when they headed
off to the clink either. Tolerance of the president’s grotesque corruption may
be another case of the rules not applying to him while still applying, more or
less, to everyone else.
Letting him sell access to the presidency and throttle
businesses that make trouble for him may come to be seen in hindsight as a form
of rough justice that the right-wing base tolerated in the name of exacting
“retribution” against his, and their, cultural enemies. But once he’s gone, the
“retribution” will be complete; President Vance lining his pockets in the same
way wouldn’t be revenge on the left, it would be garden-variety graft by a
leader whom no one much likes.
Trump gets to ruin American government but no one else
does is my optimistic take on where the right might settle on his legacy.
And to think, people call me an Eeyore.
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