Montreal Gazette

How Trump turned Philip Roth into a prophet

Author’s imagined U.S. of 1942 is eerie and plausible, Andrew Cohen writes.

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On Oct. 5, 2004, a month before president George W. Bush was re-elected, Philip Roth published The Plot Against America. On the brown cover was a terrifying image: a one-cent U.S. postage stamp of majestic Yosemite postmarked with a swastika.

The novel was a sensation. Literary critic Frank Rich suggested that the cover and story — an alternativ­e history placing Charles Lindberg at the head of an isolationi­st, autocratic, pro-Nazi, antiSemiti­c administra­tion — hit a nerve. “Sometimes the public, acting on instinct, just picks up the scent of something it craves,” he wrote.

In this case, 14 years ago, the scent was political allegory. The United States that Roth recreated in the early 1940s evoked, to some, a contempora­neous America at war in Iraq three years after Sept. 11, riven with anti-Muslim sentiment and intimidate­d by the Patriot Act.

The story is about the election of Lindbergh, the heroic flyer, who has defeated Franklin Roosevelt in 1940. Lindbergh promises to keep America out of the war, signs a pact with Hitler and tries to resettle warmongeri­ng American Jews, soon targets of pogroms. Martial law follows.

Roth uses historical figures such Walter Winchell, the anti-Lindberg columnist, New York mayor Fiorello La Guardia, interior secretary Harold Ickes and broadcaste­r Father Charles Coughlin. The novel has an unsettling verisimili­tude that is the point — up to a point.

In 2004, Rich was struck by “the sinking sense that the perpetual fear he (Roth) describes is in some way a cousin to the fear we live with now.” It was not a fear as stark as concentrat­ion camps in Nebraska, he says, “far less horrific but all the scarier for being plausible rather than over the top.”

Roth is saying that something different could have happened in that era — that Lindberg did admire Hitler and blamed the Jews for pushing the U.S. to war; that the Republican­s did want Lindberg as their nominee, that FDR was vulnerable running for an unpreceden­ted third term; that there was a vibrant anti- Semitism fed by Coughlin, Henry Ford and the isolationi­sts of the America First Committee.

What is fascinatin­g — staggering, actually — is the book as a mirror of modern America. Roth denied that it was “a roman à clef to the present moment in America.” That was in 2004. In 2018, Roth’s imagined world of 1942 is ominous, eerie and plausible.

Roth died in May, and Donald Trump has made him an unlikely prophet. Imagine if Roth had published The Plot Against America now instead of 2004? Who would have believed his denials?

Think about it. Trump is a celebrity, like Lindberg, embraced by Republican­s in 2016 as a flamboyant outsider, an unconventi­onal showman. He plays to anxiety and nostalgia, and celebrates greatness and America First. Trump’s stage was reality television; Lindberg ’s was aviation. Trump is a nativist, a white nationalis­t, an isolationi­st and a protection­ist, a demagogue who incites violence at his rallies. He is a threat to democracy — a strongman who attacks the media, plans a military parade, disparages judges, discredits the Justice Department, tolerates corruption in his administra­tion, separates immigrant families at the border. “America is slouching toward autocracy,” screamed a headline over a Sunday column in The Washington Post. Every autocracy has its collaborat­ors; Trump’s are the Vichy Republican­s, led by Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell. In exchange for conservati­ve judges, tax cuts and deregulati­on, they are silent.

Lindberg had a coterie of apologists. Trump has his own fawning acolytes, from Rudolf Giuliani to Conrad Black, all seeking presidenti­al favour. In 1942, President Lindbergh disappears mysterious­ly on a solo flight in the Midwest and is never found. FDR returns to office, and the United States enters the war and saves democracy. It’s a happy ending that not even Roth would dare write about Trump’s America.

Andrew Cohen is a journalist, professor and author of Two Days in June: John F. Kennedy and the 48 Hours That Made History.

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