I generally avoid Rush Limbaugh like the plague, but I decided to take a look at his take on the Jeff Sessions controversy. Part of what he says is very predictable and basically unhinged, but other parts are roughly accurate. My first impression was visceral, though, because he’s still churning out a very powerful form of resentment-fueled populism that the left doesn’t even try to match. This disparity in effort probably explains a lot more than we’d like to admit.
Reading the transcript of what he’s saying to his radio audience, my mind kind of veered off onto another topic. In Limbaugh’s telling, the left-leaning elites and the Washington Establishment are basically trying to eject President Trump like an unwelcome pathogen. I think that’s true, although I’d add that it is more of a bipartisan effort than Limbaugh seems to think.
The #NeverTrump movement is still alive among Washington Republicans and other elites, and it’s a stretch to view the vast consensus of the Intelligence Community as left-leaning. It was very foreseeable that Trump would have problems trying to head this government, and that success would depend on making peace with many of the enemies he had during his campaign. It’s possible for a president to radically change our government and our country, even in ways that they don’t want to change. But it requires shrewdness and patience, and it requires allies across the aisle.
Ronald Reagan radically changed this country, but he did it with a House of Representatives that was controlled by the Democrats for his entire presidency. For the last two years of his presidency, the Democrats controlled the Senate, too. Yet, when his two terms were over, you could give him credit for having to come to Washington and succeeded in completely shaking the place up.
However narrow Donald Trump’s victory was, he did win. And insofar as that gives him any kind of mandate, it gives him a mandate to do things a lot differently than they have been done in the past. What he didn’t anticipate is that he would be resisted and criticized for every radical alteration, and that he wouldn’t have the power to prevail and succeed if he didn’t build support within the power structures he was trying to change.
He’s only been if office for forty days, but he’s been taught this lesson daily. Right now, he’s staggering because his position on Russia and Vladimir Putin simply won’t be tolerated and isn’t seen as consistent with American interests or values. But the same fate met his travel ban. His effort to overhaul Obamacare is faltering because he can’t identify a plan and rally support around it. He has no path to passing his infrastructure bill because he’s alienated the Democrats and labor unions he’d need to get it passed. He seems to want to put the State Department in mothballs, but he will discover a big majority of the Senate won’t even consider going along with that. For such a short time in power, the list of these kind of failures is already long.
During the Democratic primaries, a lot of people wanted to know why I wasn’t supporting Bernie Sanders. To be clear, I did vote for him, but I really was voting for a delegate to the national convention. I didn’t think Sanders would actually be a successful president even though, on balance, I preferred his policies over what Clinton was offering.
The reason I didn’t think he’d be successful as president is because I didn’t think he had enough support among Democrats in Washington to lead them. And I didn’t think he had the personal skills to ever change that. He’d get sworn in and discover that his agenda was as dead as Obama’s had been after he lost Congress in the 2010 midterms, but he wouldn’t be able to keep his own party united behind him. He said we needed a revolution, but I thought his revolution would be dead on arrival.
Maybe I was underestimating Bernie. But Trump’s experience is only a more extreme example of what I feared would happen with a Sanders presidency.
So, as I read what Limbaugh was saying, this all came to my mind again and I thought that Limbaugh was missing something important.
He is railing against the Establishment for trying to destroy Trump and expel him from the body politic, but he’s not giving Trump the advice he needs to hear if he wants to survive. Trump is going about this radical change thing all wrong. If he doesn’t figure it out quickly, he will get impeached because he will have too many enemies on the Republican side. And, even if he survives in a technical sense, if he doesn’t change his strategy his agenda will never get off the launching pad.
The simplest way of understanding this is that Trump is currently outgunned. Bigly.
He’s made mortal enemies out of the media and the Intelligence Community, which has probably been fatal for every leader who has ever lived. But he’s also hardened his political opposition to a degree that Congressional Democrats can’t and do not want to work with him. He’s gone after the State Department too hard, which is only one of several areas where his early actions have increased the divisions within his own party. His foreign policy is simply not trusted by too many Republicans in Congress, and he’s done nothing to smooth out growing schisms on tax reform or health care reform.
Last year, the electorate was definitely restless and clamoring for some radical change. But radical change takes a special kind of leader with hard to come by skills. If you send the wrong person to drain the swamp you just create worse problems.
Finally, any president who came into office behaving like Trump would have problems and be opposed by the Establishment. But Trump has the added disadvantage of being an actual scoundrel. And if you have ethical and legal weaknesses when you arrive in Washington, and you create more for yourself once you get there, then having friends and allies and party unity becomes of paramount importance.
People don’t need to make shit up to rationalize removing Trump from power. They actually need to continually find rationales for failing to do so.
In that sense, Russia may not be the issue. It could be sexual assault. It could be countless acts of fraud. It could be the goddamned Emoluments Clause. Soon it will be some Constitutional violation or another, or even just inescapable culpability for bringing on a foreign policy, environmental or economic catastrophe.
The reason Trump has become so vulnerable so quickly is because he’s treating Washington like the pathogen when he’s the infectious agent.
A better politician might be able to take over the host and turn to it his own purposes, but what Trump is experiencing instead is a massive and determined immune response.
Put it this way. Iran-Contra would have taken out a lesser politician than Ronald Reagan. He survived it because he had earned some good will.
Your words to Allah’s ears, but I’ll believe it when I see it.
Van Jones’s craven bootlicking after that disgusting speech showed what we can count on from the meida. And CPAC showed that the Republicans are ready to submit to whatever Fuehrer presents himself.
I’m still in despair. Remembering how hard we fought during the campaign to discredit Trump and show him for what he truly is just did not work. Digging up his past trade deals, his dirty business practices, his dreadful racism and misogyny didn’t work even when it came to Christian Right. They held their noses and voted because of abortion right repeals.
The thing is, Trump is who they want. They will cut off their noses to spite their faces because he’s a bull in a china shop, and that makes him a hero. They like that he’s causing uproars, they will sacrifice their own health care and financial stability for him.
And the Republican representatives may wince every time he opens his yap, but they’re getting what they want, too. They’re ripping up the ACA and turning the departments they hate inside out. They way whisper, “No, don’t, stop” but what they’re saying is NO, DON’T STOP!
If Trump continues to manage his public speaking and keeps dishing out lies that are unchallenged, we’ve got him and his cronies for four more years. He may lose the occasional guy from his team, but I’m afraid they’re here to stay.
To hear some folks talk, electing Trump is their way of getting revenge on liberals for electing
a black presidentObama. Trump personifies their screams of deeply-offended white rage.Some people suggested that black lives matter, so America shot itself in the face in disagreement.
I remember when I was a wee lad what a big deal JFK was for Catholics everywhere. At last, one of our own had made it to the top. We had arrived. The nuns were floating a foot off the ground — and it wasn’t Sally Field — with pride. His picture was on the wall in every shop and parlor in Southie.
So I know a little about how some people must feel about Trump.
It’s just like JFK, except for assholes.
Booman writes:
Close, Booman.
Very close.
I used the “disease” metaphor here, earlier today.
Your post might have been a little more accurate if you described Trumpism as a competing pathogen…competing with the currently dominant PermaGov pathogen, which itself has developed many devices with which to protect itself against competing infectious agents.
The PermaGov pathogen is more of a parasitic invasion, one that is intelligent enough not to completely kill the host. The Trump bug, however, has not yet proven itself to be that smart. Is it learning? Yes. The hard way. Soon enough to survive? I doubt it. The competitition is simply too good. Trump’s resident genetic structure consists of a bunch of community college-level thinkers. The opposition is run almost exclusively by Ivy-League level people. The Trumpsters are outnumbered and outclassed.
Outnumbered and also outgunned, in the potential final analysis.
Watch.
AG
You’re as bad at metaphor as you are at everything else.
How can the “PermaGov” be a pathogen? Obviously if it’s the dominant force it’s the body itself, not a pollutant.
As a “conservative” infotainment loudmouth and cash-extraction machine, I doubt Rushbo has too much actual advice to impart to Der Trumper. Rushbo exists to enrage the Know Nothing base, and to create more Know Nothings, while basking in their deep, deep extremist luv….
It’s an interesting question who does exist to give Der Trumper cogent advice on how to proceed, as I see Gruppehfuhrer Bannon has Trumper back to the daily slobberings of boobery after his “magnificent!” SOTU which supposedly “made him the prez!”
Presumably there will be some sort of learning curve as this unqualified fool and his team of crackpots “adjust” to their new environment of power. Rushbo will keep the braindead base enthralled, that’s his assignment–which he will perform to perfection. HE has no learning curve, haha.
As for the upcoming days of TrumpAmerica and the actions of Der Trumper and Ryan’s Repubs, it’s mostly just waiting for Gotterdammerung, which is the only thing that could conceivably alter the death spiral of the nation; and even then, one wonders…
Limbaugh is painting with a broad brush, pinning any possible DT failure on the left, rather than on DT. It’s genius actually, heads they win, tails we lose, and it sustains the 2 minutes hate.
What takes down the donald will be the lies. Today one the donald’s people states that it was the donald who told him to change the Ukraine policy of the GOP platform. Did the Bush revenge crew get to him…..drip drip drip drip drip…..
only if repubs in congress decide it matters, and they have a very high tolerance for lying.
Depends who’s lying.
Heard exactly the same shit for two years after Reagan’s election.
People are going to be embarrassed a year from now when they look back at what they have written.
It’s not that Trump won’t be an awful President: I am sure he will be.
But the idea he will be impeached is offered by the same people who said he would lose by the same margin as McGovern in June of ’16.
A confident prediction from someone who hasn’t been right about Trump yet.
I worry people less knowledgeable about the process think this may actually think this is going to happen.
Most of the rest of this nonsense is easily dismissed. The author was kind of but not really for Bernie. Who the hell knows – the reasoning makes no sense – the story varied – in part because the author has no idea who the hell Bernie is.
And he certainly never saw Bernie amount to much.
People don’t get Bernie. To some he is some sort of mix of prophet and saint. To others he some sort of wild eyed political fanatic who doesn’t understand politics. He is neither. He is a VERY talented politician more than capable of tactical calculation. So most of what he writes about Bernie is nonsense.
But that is beside the point.
The basic truth is the #nevertrump crowd melted for the oldest political reason there is: he scares the shit out of them.
Virtually every GOP politician is scared right down to their boots of him. And as long as Trump’s approval among Republicans remains as high as it is: they are going to remain scared of him.
Machiavelli wrote:
yes.
booman argues that “the Establishment” is opposed to Trump, but that simply isn’t true about Republican members of Congress, and they’re the only ones who really count.
The Republicsn members of Congress aren’t “the Establishment.”
A few of them are.
Most are just visitors.
which neither you nor booman choose to define.
Republican members of Congress may not be “the establishment”, but they are the only people with the legal power to remove Trump from office.
The Republican Establishment is more a fiction than an actual thing at this point. Whatever power people thought it had was surely disproven by the Trump nomination.
Booman is convinced this amorphous entity actually matters.
Take a step back and ask if Trump is doing things to keep the powerful groups within the GOP happy?
Social Conservatives: A slam dunk of a Supreme Court nomination and a walk back from transgender rights.
Economic Conservatives: His deregulation is their weat dram. Oil and gas loves his move on methane, and Wall Street will love the corporate tax reduction and the reduction of Dodd-Frank regulation.
But Trump is going to increase the deficit and the freedom caucus won’t like that? Get real: nobody really cares about the deficit when they are in power.
So whats left? The foreign policy establishment I guess: not that anyone gives a good goddam what these people have to say anyway.
The GOP establishment has all the political power and relevancy of a Whip Inflation Now button.
The GOP establishment is not Trump’s problem. The GOP orthodoxy is, because it is going lead him to implement bad and unpopular policy. That is Trump’s real weakness.
The rest is the same shit we have been hearing for a year.
… My first impression was visceral, though, because he’s still churning out a very powerful form of resentment-fueled populism that the left doesn’t even try to match. This disparity in effort probably explains a lot more than we’d like to admit. …
I’d like to hear your opinion on this. The people on the left side of the aisle pushing any kind of populism aren’t making millions of dollars a year.
That’s a huge question for me, too. It’s not like there isn’t a foundation for left-wing resentment-fueld populism. The power is there, we just refuse to tap into it. Or can’t, for some reasons.
Because people still have the luxury of voting their hate.
If U6 were pushing 45%, and U3 was stuck north of 20%, as it was in 1930-32, they might vote differently.
Remember, they elected the black guy at the nadir of a recession second only to the Great Recession. Doing something that desperate takes despair.
But this is the very thing I don’t understand. I’m absolutely in favor of voting our hate. We should hate the people and institutions killing our planet, hate the people and institutions stealing our homes and murdering innocents and polluting our communities and hoarding our wealth and endangering our families’ health and country’s security.
But he’s also hardened his political opposition to a degree that Congressional Democrats can’t and do not want to work with him.
I don’t see that since a number of them are still voting to confirm Cheeto’s nominees. When is the hearings, and vote, for Gorsuch’s nomination? Do the Democrats have the intestinal fortitude to filibuster his nomination? If they don’t, it will all be for naught. Collaborators, even part-time, aren’t resistance in any way what so ever.
The analysis of Trump’s governing problem here is generally sound, but it could use a little expansion.
The hundreds of political appointees Trump has to make are not optional; if he wants a system that responds effectively to what he wants done, he has to have his people in place to oversee its performance. That is just what he has been making very difficult over the last 18 months and especially since Jan. 20. People with the necessary skills tend to have a long view about their connection with government; their involvement with it, whether as career staff or as political appointees at various times, stretches over decades.
Unless these people are true Trumpkins (of whom there are evidently not nearly enough), they now know two things will happen if they accept a job working for Trump: they will have to participate in formulating and carrying out repellent and dangerous policies; and they will be asked to do nasty things to other people, including other people with a similar long-term commitment to government (if not to Trump). Both things will make them a great many enemies; and these enemies will be around long after Trump is gone. To work for him is thus to make a hazardous bet on the nation’s political future. If Trumpism is in fact the wave of the future, they may prosper; if it isn’t, they could end up permanent outcasts. Finally, they also know that counting on Trump’s loyalty to those he has appointed is not at all a sure bet either.
There may be some “passes” given in this area for people like McMaster (although the leak this week about his record in going light on officers connected to sexual abuse may suggest otherwise). But that kind of “permission” won’t be widespread. To work for Trump will be to get the “mark of Trump,” for better or worse.
These factors are likely to leave the administration permanently short of able people — not just because so many such people disagree with it (or even despise it), but because even less principled people but ambitious people might weigh the issues in the balance and find working for Trump wanting.
Carter’s presidency is the precursor of the ‘outsider’ who thinks he knows better than everyone else and can do it on his own.
He didn’t and he didn’t.
There are really only three things the Republican establishment cares about and it will be a slam dunk for them on all three:
Everything else is just noise.
They’ll gut Obamacare, too, but that won’t be a real win for anyone. Lose, lose, lose.
And then Trump is gone in 4 years. Nobody will miss him but the Democrats won’t have control of Congress or the Court so the Republicans will be fine.
Everything else is just noise.
re:
How about:
It seems that everyone has forgotten the one great lesson from Watergate: Follow the money
I see and hear people talking; but, I see no action. It is very discouraging. Still, at 71 I most likely won’t be around to see the damage wrought by president*.