By Nick Catoggio
Monday, December 15, 2025
There are provocative lines in every Kevin Williamson
column, but this bit tucked away at the end of last
Friday's column landed like a grenade:
I have a sense, admittedly based on
nothing more than subjective evaluation, that the Trump movement already is
over, and that what we are seeing today is only its death twitches before rigor
mortis starts setting in. A movement based on entirely negative deliverables—Épater
la bourgeoisie!—is naturally going to be a short-lived thing.
Way to bury the lede, buddy.
My native pessimism makes me resist Kevin’s intuition,
but not everyone is so afflicted. “I am not at all sure I'm right but I have
this same sense,” The Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf said
of the passage quoted above. Other pundits have marveled in the same vein that
the president seems to be losing
his touch with his base. Even Marjorie Taylor Greene, an OG postliberal
chud, no longer wants to be linked to Donald Trump’s political brand.
“Are you MAGA?” Lesley Stahl asked her recently during an
interview with 60 Minutes. “I’m America first,” the soon-to-be-former
congresswoman corrected
her. “MAGA is President Trump’s phrase. That’s his, his political
policies.” When pressed by Stahl whether that meant her association with MAGA
is “over,” Greene confirmed it: “I’m America first. Yep.”
Anecdotes aren’t data, of course, but the data is also
trending poorly for Trump. A new NBC
News poll finds the share of GOPers who identify as “MAGA” rather than
“traditional Republican” shrank from 57-43 in April of this year to 50-50 now.
Among so-called MAGA Republicans, 70 percent say they strongly approve of
Trump’s performance today versus 78 percent who said so eight months ago.
The state of the president’s movement resembles the state
of the president himself, tired
and obviously
in decline although perhaps still a ways away from being fully kaput. Those
“death twitches” might be more like minor seizures—not necessarily a sign of
impending doom but compelling evidence that something seriously ain’t right.
We should be precise about terminology here. When Kevin
refers to “the Trump movement,” I don’t take him to mean postliberalism writ
large. The right’s authoritarian turn will persist for years to come,
unfortunately, and will almost certainly have a proponent in the GOP’s 2028
presidential nominee. The populist Republican base has been too brain-damaged
by a decade of Trump and conspiratorial right-wing infotainment to heal in the
near term. It will linger for a long while in its civic coma, to America’s detriment.
What Kevin meant, I think, is that Trump-centric postliberalism
is dying.
The president remains at the center of the right, but
some of the satellites around him, like Greene, are beginning to spin
out of orbit as his gravitational pull weakens. If you had to bet on
whether that pull will regain strength over the next three years of
lame-duckery or continue to gradually lose force, it’s obvious which way you
would wager. The “sense” Kevin and Friedersdorf are having, I suspect, is that
the political entropy we’re seeing at the moment will continue apace on the
right and eventually pull the MAGA solar system apart.
If Trump-centric postliberalism really is experiencing
its early death twitches, why is that?
Priorities.
It’s because the president, strangely, doesn’t share the
priorities of either of the two factions of his MAGA base.
One faction is right-wingers who strained under Biden-era
inflation and embraced the hype about Trump’s ability to turn things around.
They’re fine with postliberalism, but for them it’s more of a side dish to the
main course of economic revival—or, perhaps, a means to that end, with Trump
wielding authoritarian powers like a wand to work his supposed magic on the
cost of living. Replacing an out-of-touch Democrat with a populist strongman
who champions “the forgotten man” could only help with affordability, right?
It hasn’t helped. And not only hasn’t it helped, the
president can barely be bothered to pretend to care. The Washington
Post has a story today about conservative pollster Mark Mitchell
visiting the White House recently to urge Trump to refocus on the “pragmatic
economic populism” that his base wants, only to have Trump steer the
conversation around to … golf. “To the extent to which we were talking about
the economic populism message, he wasn’t as interested as I would have hoped,”
Mitchell complained.
Of course he isn’t interested. Inflation was an
irresistible line of attack for Trump as a candidate, but it’s forever an
afterthought in his economic agenda. Lay aside the obviously inflationary
policies he’s pursued, like pushing various forms
of stimulus
or browbeating the Federal Reserve to cut
interest rates: No one who cared a lick about affordability would have
chosen 2025 as the year to start the
trade equivalent of a nuclear war.
A traditional politician would at least seize the moment
to do a bit of Clintonian
pain-feeling, but our president is spiritually incapable of empathy, as
America was reminded yet again on Monday
morning. Instead Trump has reverted to his usual tactics of defensiveness
and denialism, encouraging MAGA to be happy with less and
insisting that his economy should be graded an A+++++ despite consumer
confidence falling below Great Recession levels.
He thinks, or wants Americans to think, that the
affordability crisis is a
“hoax” manufactured to hurt him politically. But even some of his fans
can’t swallow that lie, with 4 in 10 Republicans telling CBS
News last month that the president is making prices and inflation sound
better than they really are. (Across the entire public, 60 percent said so.) As
GOPers grow
disillusioned and lose faith in
Trump’s economic acumen, MAGA is weakening and starting to twitch.
The other faction of his base is what we might call
culture-war populists, people drawn to the president not because they’ve been
seduced by the economic wonder of Peronism but because of his willingness to
use state power against their cultural enemies. These are true postliberals,
keen to expose and dismantle the “hidden hand” of the old establishment that’s
supposedly causing all of the country’s problems. To them, “drain the swamp”
means much more than just reducing the influence of lobbyists in Washington.
The wrinkle is that Trump no longer agrees with them
about who and what “the swamp” consists of.
Three cultural hobby horses have consumed far-right media
this year. One is the Justice Department’s files on Jeffrey Epstein, the second
is the murder of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, and the third is
Israel’s influence over the U.S. government. In all three cases, Trump is on
the wrong side of the chud-o-sphere. He did everything he could to discourage
the release of Epstein material; he hasn’t commented on the insane conspiracy
theories about Kirk’s assassination being pushed by
Candace Owens; and he remains a staunch ally of Israel and Benjamin
Netanyahu, to the dismay of the
Carlson-Fuentes right.
He just doesn’t matter much anymore to the stuff
culture-war populists are most interested in.
Things might be different if Democrats controlled at
least one chamber in Congress, redirecting those populists back toward partisan
warfare. Because the GOP has a trifecta in Washington, however, a stridently
anti-establishment postliberal faction finds itself in the awkward position of
being aligned with the establishment itself, with no “hidden hand” to rally
against. The obsessions with Kirk’s murder and Israel are an obvious attempt to
fill that void in the same way that QAnon was during Trump’s first term, giving
a paranoid revolutionary faction something to revolt against at a moment when
it’s not allowed to revolt against the government that the president leads.
“A movement based on entirely negative deliverables,” as
Kevin put it, really needs an enemy to hold it together.
Absent one, go figure that the, ahem, intellectual energy
among postliberals has shifted away from mindlessly defending Trump and his
agenda and toward their
disputes with each other, with predictably crankish results. “The Right’s
media apparatus is how the Right teaches its followers how to think, and it’s
currently getting consumed by conspiracy, psychodrama, and tabloid conflicts,”
right-wing activist Christopher
Rufo warned recently. “If left unchecked, it will turn the audience into
the equivalent of a Third World click farm.”
The audience has been the equivalent of a Third World
click farm for years, but the fact that even someone like Rufo who dines out on it
has begun to notice and worry is significant. Trump is no longer the chief
preoccupation of many of the media barnacles who rode his ascendance to fame
and fortune, leaving them free to let their freak flags fly—and now that they
have, those flags are freaky enough to alarm even some of the other freaks.
That too feels like a death twitch.
The future.
Miraculous recoveries have been known to happen when
someone is nearing death, of course.
A blue wave next fall that hands Democrats a House
majority for the last two years of Trump’s term might hit MAGA like a jolt from
a defibrillator. At some point, Hakeem Jeffries’ caucus will move to impeach
the president and the right will dutifully rally around its leader, no matter
how impeachable his conduct might be. That could boost Trump’s gravitational
pull the same way that being indicted did in 2023.
There’s also a chance that he’ll connive to run for a
third term in 2028, although it’s less likely than it was six months ago.
Between his declining health and declining public confidence in his economic
know-how, it’s hard to imagine there’ll be much enthusiasm for Trump 3.0
outside of the most diehard cultish right-wing circles. But one never knows:
There’s nothing that makes postliberals hotter under the collar than a show of
strongman bravado aimed at some seemingly invulnerable law or norm. The right might
rally behind the president less because they’re eager for four more years than
for the sheer nihilistic transgressive thrill of flouting the Constitution.
But as I said earlier, if you had to bet, you’d bet that
MAGA will grow less devoted to Trump as time wears on. He’s unlikely
to reverse course on tariffs or to embrace any of the key conspiracies that
have captured his fans’ imaginations, after all, so a political comeback will
depend almost entirely on whether
he lucks into an economic rebound. Even if he does, his health might be
sketchy enough come next year that supporters will begin discouraging the
“third term” talk anyway, fearing a replay of the Biden disaster if Trump
persists in running in 2028 and then melts down a few months before the
election.
Another way to consider the staying power of MAGA is
this: What will the point of this presidency be over the next three years?
It feels strange to ask that question about an executive
who’s consolidated power more aggressively than any predecessor since Franklin
Roosevelt, but I do think his base might soon face a crisis of meaning. What
will Trump supposedly be raring to do when he gets out of bed in the morning
(or the
afternoon, I should say) between now and 2028 that might reasonably cause
postliberals to make their politics Trump-centric again?
The correct answer to any question about galvanizing the
right is usually “immigration,” but immigration seems like a problem that’s
both solved and unsolvable. The president’s biggest policy success since
returning to office has been ending the ingress at the southern border, but now
that that crisis has eased, the issue no longer enjoys the same salience. (Just
check the results of special elections lately.) “This is the paradox of
politics,” Peggy
Noonan wrote recently. “Every time you solve a major problem, you’re
removing a weapon from your political arsenal.”
It’s not the border that’ll preoccupy Trump’s immigration
agenda for the rest of his term, it’s the task of meaningfully reducing the
population of illegals who are already here. But that mission is, to some
extent, impossible: ICE is still far
below the quota of daily arrests that the White House has set for it, and
the bad press it’s generating by focusing
on nonviolent migrants has already begun to alienate some
right-wing fellow travelers. If the president tries to rally his base by
getting more aggressive with deportations over his final three years, his
policy will almost certainly involve more brutality, more cases of mistaken
identity, and do more economic damage as illegal workers leave the labor force
en masse. And that will damage him politically on balance.
So immigration probably isn’t the key to a Trump
political revival that ends the MAGA death twitches. And if that won’t do it,
what will?
He remains keen to broker peace in Ukraine and beyond,
but his base isn’t very interested in foreign policy, and insofar as they are,
the president is going
awfully easy on the one country his supporters have traditionally been
eager to contain. Beyond that, he’s mostly focused on passion projects—building
ballrooms, putting his name on
federal agencies, demagoging
Somali immigrants, making
America
white again,
threatening dying
cable news networks, accusing people who question his health of “sedition,” and
of course sticking
his thumb in as
many pies as possible.
Every good Republican wants their president to get
fabulously rich off of his office, to be sure, but that’s not much of a cause
to sustain the next three years.
We’ll know in 11 months just how deadly these recent
twitches are, I think. More spasms will happen between now and November—let’s
see how many right-wingers conspicuously don’t share Trump’s fury if the
Supreme Court strikes down his tariff authority, for instance—but it’ll take a
midterm blowout to trigger full-on MAGA death convulsions. Even then, the
patient might pull through: Some Republicans will treat the results as further
proof that the party can’t win without Trump on the ballot and therefore
rallying around the president as Democrats prepare to take the House gavel is
essential.
But if you’ve spent the last decade praying for the right
to decide that it’s time at last to move on from Trump, a midterm bloodbath
next year a few months after he turns 80 is as close as you’ll get since
January 6 to having your prayers answered. There will be lots of chatter
in the aftermath about “Trump fatigue,” the future, and the impending 2028
cycle, and stakeholders ranging from Trump diehards to radical postliberals to
traditional conservatives will all begin clustering to form their own centers
of political gravity as the MAGA solar system pulls apart. Entropy always wins
eventually.
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