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The Faustian Deal that Trump Created:
Worrisome and Dangerous
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
July 22, 2019
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From left, members of the US House of Representatives: Rashida
Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez at a news conference Monday, July 15, 2019 |
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The "Faustian Deal"
While much has been already been written about President
Donald Trump recent racist taunts against four first-term women Members
of Congress, I have a few observations of my own to make.
In the first place, no one should have been surprised that as Trump
began his reelection campaign he would target and bait people of color.
This, after all, was how he won in 2016. Back then he incited against
Mexicans, Muslims, and refugees, in addition, of course, to the "fake
news media." It appears that nothing has changed – his modus operandi
and his targets are still the same.
In a series of tweets and
then at a campaign event this past week in North Carolina, the old/new
Trump was on full display. As the entertainer/performer-in-chief, his
campaign rallies are more like a stand-up comedy routine than political
speech-making. He taunts his opponents, making crude jokes at their
expense; he conjures up threats, preying on his audience's hatreds,
fears, and insecurity; he makes outrageous (and often fabricated) boasts
and false promises that he has no intention of fulfilling; and he
complains bitterly about the suffering he must endure because he alone
is fighting an establishment that impedes his efforts at every turn.
There is a political agenda to be sure, but for the most part, his
rallies are performance, masking that agenda. In this regard, he's not
unlike Benito Mussolini – a supreme actor who also held his rapt
audiences in the palm of his hand as he had them laughing, cheering, and
chanting in anger.
When Trump first began his run for the
presidency in 2015, the Republican establishment had contempt for him
and his antics. Back then, Senator Lindsey Graham called him a
"a wrecking ball for the Republican Party who's a race-baiting,
xenophobic bigot." Then Chair of the Republican Party, Reince
Priebus, charged that Trump's rhetoric came "at the expense of American
values." Other critics included former Vice President Dick Cheney,
Majority Leader Paul Ryan, and Senator Marco Rubio.
It was
during that primary season that I had a leading Republican (a former
Senator, turned political consultant) on my weekly TV show "Viewpoint."
At that point in the election, Donald Trump had taken a lead in the
polls and the GOP establishment that had once rejected his candidacy has
suddenly fallen silent. I asked my guest "Why?"
His response was
quite simple. "They are afraid of his 'base,'" he told me. They had seen
the enthusiasm he generated at his rallies and although they still
"found his message repulsive," they didn't want to "alienate his
supporters" by continuing to attack him.
When it became clear,
that Trump had defeated his opponents, the Republican establishment made
what can only be described as a virtual "Faustian deal" with the
presumptive nominee. If he won, they would be in a position to get what
they wanted most: more conservative judges, a revamped regressive system
of taxation, sweeping deregulation that would roll back decades of
reform, and undoing most of President Obama's progressive agenda,
including the GOP-hated "Obamacare."
In return, the GOP would
not only remain silent in the face of Trump's peccadilloes – past and
present – they would also subject themselves to the humiliation of
actually trying to defend his words and behavior. Listen to this
"post-Faustian deal" Lindsey Graham: "He's not, in my view, a racist by
any stretch of the imagination. I've never heard him make a single
racist statement!"
There were those Republicans who believed (or
maybe just hoped) that after entering the Oval Office Trump would become
more Presidential. They were sorely mistaken. If anything, his behavior
became more erratic and provocative. His bizarre claims, his
inflammatory tweets, and some of his Executive Orders have continued to
generate outrage. While members of his party may have felt some
discomfort at these "un-Presidential" antics, they soon learned that,
for Trump, there was a method to what appeared to be madness.
He
dominated every news cycle. When challenged by negative developments, a
"crazy" tweet would create sufficient enough distraction, that it became
the day's "Breaking News." Even his recent North Carolina rally was
initially organized to divert attention from the scheduled Congressional
testimony of Robert Mueller which the White House assumed would prove
embarrassing for the president. And ever conscious of his base, Trump
knew how to turn attacks into a rallying cry for the faithful. His
enemies hadn't changed – Mexicans, Muslims, and Media. Nor had his
reaction to them.
What had changed is that the
entertainer-in-chief became so enchanted with the power he had over his
followers (speaking before large rallies of adoring fans can have a
drug-like effect) and they had become so captivated by his message of
resentment and fear of the "others" against whom he rails that we have
entered a danger zone.
In the beginning, Trump may have been
merely playing a part – now he really means it. And some of his
supporters may have found it liberating that his taunts and insults of
"undesirable" foreigners now gave them permission to no longer need to
be polite and correct in their public views. Now they are acting on this
in hateful and hurtful ways. Hate crimes are up and law enforcement
agencies which once focused their resources mainly on "Muslim extremism"
have shifted to confront the growing threat of "white nationalism."
And through it all, the President seems not only not to care about
the impact his antics are having on our country and its political
culture, he actually appears to be delighted by it.
Compounding
this growing concern has been the Trump Administration's obstructionism
in the face of legitimate Congressional inquiries. While Republicans
tormented the Clinton Administration with repeated investigations into
their earlier Arkansas financial dealings and Hillary Clinton was
subjected to repeated grilling over the patently false accusation that
she was responsible for the murder of the US Ambassador to Libya, Trump
has refused to cooperate with any Congressional requests for
information. He has refused: to release his tax returns; to allow
inquiries into whether or not his businesses have profited from his
Presidency; to provide information as to how he was able to overturn the
decision of the intelligence community to deny security clearance to his
relatives; to explain why he fired the FBI chief who was investigating
Russian meddling in our elections; and to justify why and how the
Commerce Department sought to make a change in the way the Census is
conducted. The President has not only refused to comply with these
legitimate requests for information, he has also refused to allow
Administration officials to testify before Congress. All of this has not
only created a sense of impunity with this Administration seeing itself
above the law. It has also been exploited by the President in tweets and
speeches to inflame his base against the Congress, the courts, and the
rule of law.
A few weeks back, after Trump tweeted that he
might seek to change the Constitution to enable him to run in 2024 for a
third term, one commentator raised the question "What would Donald Trump
do if he lost this election in 2020?" Would he leave office gracefully?
And would his supporters accept the verdict of the majority of voters or
would their anger and resentment that he has so assiduously cultivated
lead them to protests and violence?
These are worrisome
questions, to be sure, but the very fact that they are being asked
should be cause for concern. We are living in the political world that
Trump and the GOP's "Faustian Deal" has created and it's
dangerous.
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