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Trump On the Path to Authoritarianism:
Discrediting
Opponents from the Other Party, Law Enforcement, and the Media
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
June 4, 2018
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When Donald Trump was elected, I, like many others feared what his
presidency might do to the country. A year and a half into his term in
office, our concerns have been justified.
He and his team are
dismantling health care reform, erasing needed environmental
protections, casting aside international treaties and agreements,
exacerbating income inequality, and putting vulnerable communities at
risk.
What I find as troubling as these policies, however, is
the profound damage he has done to civil discourse and our political
culture, and the danger he poses to our democracy. There are warning
signs that he is taking us down the path to authoritarian rule from
which it will be difficult to recover.
What are those signs? An
aggrieved and angry constituency, and a charismatic leader who is able
to prey on their discontent by creating a breakdown of trust in
democratic institutions and a fraying of social cohesion. These
are the guideposts on the path to authoritarianism and they describe the
trajectory of the Trump presidency. A new president and
Congress can undo some of Trump's destructive policies as quickly as
they were implemented. But the damage inflicted on our culture and
institutions will take generations to repair.
There was a time
when I would caution folks not to pay attention to Trump's tweets or to
listen to his nightclub-style stand-up comedy routines. They were, I
would argue, distractions. He was making outrageous and obviously false
statements only to take press attention away from the destructive
policies he was pursuing. In this, I was only partially right. He was,
to be sure, engaging in classic misdirection. But, as we have come to
see, the tweets and rally speeches carry their own poison.
As a
case in point, in just the past week Trump has launched a number of
"twitter rants" in which he repeatedly attacked a variety of "enemies".
There were 75 tweets, in all, with one-half of them targeting his foes:
the media, the Department of Justice, the FBI, the courts, Democrats,
and, of course, Hillary Clinton.
There were 10 tweets accusing
the FBI of planting a "highly paid spy" in his campaign, calling the law
enforcement agency "corrupt" and "dishonest"; 18 tweets denouncing the
"Fake witch hunt" against him; another 10 attacking the media as
"corrupt", "dishonest", having a "double standard"; and finally another
dozen mentions of Democrats, whom he accused of planting a "highly paid"
spy to infiltrate his campaign (which he termed #Spygate) and coddling
MS-13 killers. In the end, he says those who were guilty of collusion
were the Department of Justice, the FBI, the Democrats, and Russia.
While all of this might be described as political gamesmanship or
dismissed as the idle ranting or mere frustrated and disgruntled
chatter, it is in fact quite dangerous. Trump is, after all, the
president and his tweets are read by millions. They are given an even
larger audience when repeated by the well-established right-wing echo
chamber of Fox News and a host of websites and talk radio programs. All
of this has enabled him to spin a narrative of distrust and discontent
that has taken hold among his aggrieved supporters.
Central to
his narrative is an intensely divisive "us versus them" mindset, a
complete disregard of civility, and a dangerous erosion of confidence in
some of the basic institutions of our society. In an especially
revealing interview a few months ago, Trump explained to the interviewer
that the reason he focused on discrediting and demeaning the media and
other institutions was so that when they came after him, his supporters
would be inclined to disbelieve what was being reported. And this is
what has come to pass.
Not only has Trump used his tweets and
speeches to foster mistrust of the courts, the DOJ, and FBI, he has also
preyed on his supporters' social, political, economic, and cultural
discontent by targeting for blame a number of minority racial and ethnic
communities. This has contributed to fueling xenophobia and racism,
legitimating displays of unconscionable bigotry.
One example
of the impact of this world to which Trump has given birth was on
display this week when a Trump-supporter, TV star Roseanne Barr launched
an offensive and racist twitter rant late one night. In one particularly
egregious tweet she described former Obama aide Valerie Jarrett as being
the offspring of the "Muslim Brotherhood and the Planet of the Apes".
The ABC television network, that carried her show, promptly responded by
denouncing her comments and canceling her contract.
Barr quickly
apologized in a tweet, but her supporters flooded her twitter account
with protests supporting her and amplifying her racism. At first, Barr
pleaded with them to stop defending her, saying that her tweet was wrong
and inexcusable. Then, true to form, Barr shifted gears assuming the
role of the victim of unfair elites.
Since Barr is known to be
a supporter of Trump (and he is a supporter of hers), all eyes were on
the president to see how he would respond. Here's what he wrote:
"Bob Iger of ABC called Valerie Jarrett to let her know that 'ABC does
not tolerate comments like those' made by Roseanne Barr. Gee, he never
called President Donald J. Trump to apologize for the HORRIBLE
statements made about me on ABC. Maybe I just didn't get the call."
The net effect of Trump's tweet was to dismiss the uproar over
Barr's racism, to turn the tables by accusing the network of a double
standard, and to validate his (and Barr's) supporters sense of being
victims of a hostile media.
It took America two generations to
put the lid on the type of overt displays of
racism Barr exhibited in her tweet. To be sure,
racism didn't go away but people learned to be ashamed enough not to be
public about it. In just a few years, Trump has blown the lid away
giving comfort to bigots of all stripes. He has used this and his other
rhetoric to build his movement of discontent, all the while
discrediting his opponents whether
they be from the "other party", law enforcement, or the media. This is
how democracies are wounded and the path to authoritarianism is paved.
There is danger ahead.
***
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