The only way Trump will succeed

Donald Trump, surrounded by business leaders and administration officials, prepares to sign a memorandum on intellectual property tariffs on high-tech goods from China, at the White House in Washington, U.S. March 22, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
I was on Stephen Robinsonâs podcast when I blurted out a personal truth. For years, I have defended the Democratic Party in various ways, but since Donald Trumpâs victory, I havenât been in the mood. Matter of fact, I find myself open to arguments that I had not been open to.
For instance, the one about how the Biden administration, namely US Attorney General Merrick Garland, should have prosecuted Trumpimmediately after his attempted overthrow of the US government. I figured Garlandâs caution was appropriate, and anyway, I believed there was no way voters would rehire a traitor they had already fired.
I feel different now.
Iâm also more open to the argument about how the Democrats must develop and maintain a media ecosystem of their own thatâs as strong as the one that gave the GOP a trifecta. Itâs not that I didnât think the Democrats needed one. Itâs that I believed that propaganda never made anyone believe anything they didnât already believe. If youâre a racist, youâre a racist. A white-power podcaster canât make it so.
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But I now see the problem in a more nuanced light.
The problem is that the Democrats donât have a media ecosystem of their own with which to compete with the Republicans on a level playing field for voters who are not getting, and who are not capable of getting, good information on their own. The Democratic Party trusts, and relies on, the public too much. Facts and history must never be allowed to speak for themselves. The Democrats must speak for them.
So I find myself in a rather new position. Iâm no longer in the mood to defend the Democrats (for now, anyway; time will tell), but Iâm also not in the mood to criticize them on the old ideological grounds that are familiar to the followers of the Democratic Partyâs best-known critics.
I donât see a point in the class-based critique of people like Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders. I donât see a point in the âcentrismâ-based critique of people like Massachusetts Congressman Seth Moulton. The Democrats are already a party of the working class. They are already centrist as a result of already being a party of working-class policy.
Anyway, Americaâs backsliding canât be solved with policy, as the crisis we face isnât the result of âbig dislocations, like a depression with mass unemployment and the legacy of losing a major war,â as Professor Grossman put it. If it could be solved with policy, it would be solved, as Joe Biden flipped four decades of economic consensus on their head.
No, the backsliding is the result of a lack of good information.
And guts.
So my beef with the Democrats isnât a matter of ideology. (Itâs nothing like what you will find on âChapo Trap House.â) My beef is a matter of temperament. At issue isnât âpurity,â as Moulton said. Itâs courage. Either the Democrats meant it when they said Trump is a menace to democracy and the rule of law â or they didnât. Either they meant it when they said that nowâs the time for choosing â or they didnât.
Honestly, Iâm not sure they meant it.
In response to Trumpâs renewed threat to prosecute members of the Congress who investigated his attempted paramilitary takeover of the US government, Adam Schiff, who sat on the panel, and who is now California's junior senator, said: âI donât think the incoming president should be threatening his political opponents with jail time. Thatâs not the kind of talk we should hear from a president in a democracy.â
What is this?
Politics or kindergarten?
Schiff went on: âNor do I think a pardon is necessary for members of the January 6 committee. We are proud of the work we did ⦠It was a fundamental oversight obligation to investigate the first attempt to interfere with a peaceful transfer of power in our history.â
Look, I told you. I have defended the Democrats in various ways for years, especially when they stood up for democracy, the Constitution and the rule of law after Trumpâs attempt to overthrow the will of the people. But this is so weak, I canât defend it. I donât think anyone can.
Hereâs what Schiff could have said:
- Donald Trump is a criminal. It was criminal to lead an insurrection. Itâs criminal to threaten jail time for his opponents. Trump is a criminal up and down, and criminals are bad for democracy, especially when they are democratically elected.
- A criminal president is going to corrupt, even more than it already has been, the moral fabric of American society.
- The Democrats, as the party of the rule of law, will do everything in their power to bring criminals to justice.
- The Democrats may lose in the end, but not without a fight.
Schiff could have said any of these things without losing support back home. Instead, we got The Language Police or The Disappointed School Marm, take your pick, who not only failed to show resolve but also validated the allegation that the Democrats are a bunch of pricks.
Jesus God, January 6 was not âthe first attempt to interfere with a peaceful transfer of power.â It was a crime. It was treason. But Schiff couched that fact in abstract multisyllabic words, as if euphemism and understatement were the appropriate mode of presidential discourse.
Worse was what the Senate minority leader said afterward.
âHe did a great job,â Chuck Schumer said, referring to Adam Schiffâs performance on the J6 committee. âAnd it will stand for itself.â
No, it wonât. It really wonât. With the rightwing media apparatus, Trump erased facts. With a new administration, heâll try erasing history. Watch. And he will succeed if the Democrats wonât fight.
Like I said, my beef with the Democrats isnât a matter of ideology. Either they meant it when they said they are a political party.
Or they didnât.
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