Irish Independent

Speech showed president has redefined US conservati­sm in his own toxic and ugly image

- Max Boot

PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s State of the Union address was not a great speech – he can no more deliver a great speech than his bargain-basement aides can craft one – but it was greatly revealing. What it showed is how little his views have in common with what used to be known as American conservati­sm. There was, in fact, almost nothing conservati­ve about it save for his cheap-shot attack on socialism (which he equated with Venezuela rather than, say, Denmark) and his evangelica­l-pleasing call to ban late-term abortions.

He offered almost no domestic agenda, but much of what he proposed – more infrastruc­ture spending, “nationwide paid family leave”, and lowering prescripti­on drug prices – was straight out of the liberal wish-list. There was not a mention of cutting spending or balancing the budget – once staples of GOP rhetoric.

Republican­s used to be the party of free trade, but Trump bragged about his imposition of tariffs and asked for authority to impose even more tariffs (aka taxes).

Republican­s also used to be the “law and order” party, but in one of the speech’s odder lines – “if there is going to be peace and legislatio­n, there cannot be war and investigat­ion” – Trump seemed to equate special counsel Robert Mueller with foreign enemies bent on attacking America. The reality is, of course, the opposite: Mueller is defending America from an attack carried out by Russia.

Perhaps most telling was the way that Trump bragged about the US economy. Instead of crediting companies with creating jobs, he said, “We” – meaning we the government – “have created 5.3 million new jobs, and importantl­y, added 600,000 new manufactur­ing jobs”. (Why are manufactur­ing jobs the most important anyway? Because his supporters are more likely to be blue-collar?)

Contrast this with what former president Barack Obama said in his 2016 State of the Union: “We’re in the middle of the longest streak of private-sector job creation in history.” You read that right: the Democratic president gave more credit to the private sector than the Republican president.

Nor was there anything conservati­ve about Trump’s remarks on foreign policy. He once again attacked America’s allies, saying “For years, the United States was being treated very unfairly by Nato”, before going on to praise America’s enemies. “My relationsh­ip with Kim Jong-un is a good one,” he said, referring to one of the most vicious dictators on the planet. Trump sounded more like Bernie Sanders than John McCain when he said, “Great nations do not fight endless wars”. The joint chiefs of staff sat stone-faced as he bragged about his decision to remove US troops from Syria – a move he made, we now know, without bothering to consult General Joseph Votel, head of the US Central Command.

Finally, Trump boasted of his peace talks with the Taliban. They are, like the North Koreans, the kind of enemies that Republican­s once lambasted Democrats for daring to talk to. Not anymore. “After two decades of war, the hour has come to at least try for peace,” Trump said. “And the other side would like to do the same thing.” Note that he vouched for the Taliban’s desire for peace – even though there is no evidence that the Taliban is willing to give up its armed struggle or to recognise the democratic­ally elected, pro-American government in Kabul.

Trump repeatedly honoured the heroes of World War II, producing some of the night’s best moments. But his own foreign policy is named after the isolationi­st movement of the 1930s that opposed battling the Nazis. The Republican Party, along with the rest of the country, disowned ‘America First’ after 1945, but Trump is bringing it back.

For all his deviations from modern conservati­sm, no one would ever mistake Trump for a Democrat. He didn’t mention the threats of climate change or gun violence, and, as usual, he demonised

It is a populist agenda combining the big government infatuatio­n of Democrats with the xenophobia and racism of the far right

undocument­ed immigrants – highlighti­ng crime victims even though immigrants are more law-abiding than the native-born. And, once again, he conjured up the threat of “large, organised caravans... on the march to the United States”, without admitting that his hysteria about two previous caravans last year had been unfounded. Those caravans did not pillage and maraud across America. They peacefully petered out despite the absence of his vaunted border wall.

Trump was more right than he realised when he said: “The agenda I will lay out this evening is not a Republican agenda or a Democrat agenda.” No, it’s not. And it’s not the “agenda of the American people” either.

It is a populist agenda that combines the big government infatuatio­n of Democrats with the xenophobia and racism of the far right. This toxic combinatio­n has little in common with the sort of principled conservati­sm I grew up espousing – and yet the House chamber was full of selfdescri­bed conservati­ves lustily applauding his remarks.

Trump is a failed president, but the State of the Union speech made clear that he has succeeded in redefining conservati­sm in his own, deeply unattracti­ve image. (© Washington Post)

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