No, Not Trump, Not Ever
In
convincing fashion, Republican voters seem to be selecting Donald Trump
as their nominee. And in a democracy, victory has legitimacy to it.
Voters are rarely wise but are usually sensible. They understand their
own problems. And so deference is generally paid to the candidate who
wins.
And deference is being paid. Gov. Rick Scott of Florida is urging Republicans
to coalesce around Trump. Pundits are coming out with their “What We
Can Learn” commentaries. Those commentaries are built on a hidden
respect for the outcome, that this is a rejection of a Republicanism
that wasn’t working and it points in some better direction.
The question is: Should deference be paid to this victor? Should we bow down to the judgment of these voters?
Well,
some respect is in order. Trump voters are a coalition of the
dispossessed. They have suffered lost jobs, lost wages, lost dreams. The
American system is not working for them, so naturally they are looking
for something else.
Moreover,
many in the media, especially me, did not understand how they would
express their alienation. We expected Trump to fizzle because we were
not socially intermingled with his supporters and did not listen
carefully enough. For me, it’s a lesson that I have to change the way I
do my job if I’m going to report accurately on this country.
And yet reality is reality.
Donald
Trump is epically unprepared to be president. He has no realistic
policies, no advisers, no capacity to learn. His vast narcissism makes
him a closed fortress. He doesn’t know what he doesn’t know and he’s
uninterested in finding out. He insults the office Abraham Lincoln once
occupied by running for it with less preparation than most of us would
undertake to buy a sofa.
Trump
is perhaps the most dishonest person to run for high office in our
lifetimes. All politicians stretch the truth, but Trump has a steady
obliviousness to accuracy.
This week, the Politico reporters Daniel Lippman, Darren Samuelsohn and Isaac Arnsdorf fact-checked
4.6 hours of Trump speeches and press conferences. They found more than
five dozen untrue statements, or one every five minutes.
“His
remarks represent an extraordinary mix of inaccurate claims about
domestic and foreign policy and personal and professional boasts that
rarely measure up when checked against primary sources,” they wrote.
He
is a childish man running for a job that requires maturity. He is an
insecure boasting little boy whose desires were somehow arrested at age
12. He surrounds himself with sycophants. “You can always tell when the
king is here,” Trump’s butler told Jason Horowitz in a recent Times profile.
He brags incessantly about his alleged prowess, like how far he can hit
a golf ball. “Do I hit it long? Is Trump strong?” he asks.
In
some rare cases, political victors do not deserve our respect. George
Wallace won elections, but to endorse those outcomes would be a moral
failure.
And so it is with Trump.
History
is a long record of men like him temporarily rising, stretching back to
biblical times. Psalm 73 describes them: “Therefore pride is their
necklace; they clothe themselves with violence. … They scoff, and speak
with malice; with arrogance they threaten oppression. Their mouths lay
claim to heaven, and their tongues take possession of the earth.
Therefore their people turn to them and drink up waters in abundance.”
And
yet their success is fragile: “Surely you place them on slippery
ground; you cast them down to ruin. How suddenly they are destroyed.”
The
psalmist reminds us that the proper thing to do in the face of demagogy
is to go the other way — to make an extra effort to put on decency,
graciousness, patience and humility, to seek a purity of heart that is
stable and everlasting.
The
Republicans who coalesce around Trump are making a political error.
They are selling their integrity for a candidate who will probably lose.
About 60 percent of Americans disapprove of him, and that number has been steady since he began his campaign.
Worse,
there are certain standards more important than one year’s election.
There are certain codes that if you betray them, you suffer something
much worse than a political defeat.
Donald
Trump is an affront to basic standards of honesty, virtue and
citizenship. He pollutes the atmosphere in which our children are
raised. He has already shredded the unspoken rules of political civility
that make conversation possible. In his savage regime, public life is
just a dog-eat-dog war of all against all.
As
the founders would have understood, he is a threat to the long and
glorious experiment of American self-government. He is precisely the
kind of scapegoating, promise-making, fear-driving and deceiving
demagogue they feared.
Trump’s supporters deserve respect. They are left out of this economy. But Trump himself? No, not Trump, not ever.
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