The Philippine Star

Crazies, cowards and the Trump coup

- By PAUL KRUGMAN

Like many people, I expected the worst from the Jan. 6 committee: long, droning speeches, grandstand­ing by posturing politician­s, lots of hesaid-she-said.

What we’ve gotten instead has been riveting and terrifying. The usual suspects are, of course, nit-picking at the details — although never over the crucial points, like Donald Trump’s desire to participat­e in an armed assault on the Capitol and never, tellingly, under oath — and some in the news media are, shamefully, playing along. But realistica­lly there is no longer any doubt that Trump tried to overturn the results of a lawful election and when all else had failed, encouraged and tried to abet a violent attack on Congress.

I’ll leave it to the legal experts to figure out whether the evidence should lead to formal criminal proceeding­s, and in particular whether Trump himself should be charged with seditious conspiracy. But no reasonable person can deny that what happened after the 2020 election was an attempted coup, a betrayal of everything America stands for.

I still see some people comparing this scandal to Watergate. That’s like comparing assault and battery to a traffic violation. Trump’s actions were by far the worst thing any American president has ever done.

But here’s the thing: Dozens of people in or close to the Trump administra­tion must have known what was going on; many of them surely have firsthand knowledge of at least some aspects of the coup attempt. Yet only a handful have come forward with what they know.

And what about Republican­s in Congress? Almost surely many if not most of them realize the enormity of what happened — after all, the assault on the Capitol placed their own lives in danger. Yet 175 House Republican­s voted against creating a national commission on the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, with only 35 in favor.

How can we explain this abdication of duty? Even now, full-on MAGA cultists are probably a minority among GOP politician­s. For every Lauren Boebert or Marjorie Taylor Greene, there are most likely several Kevin McCarthys — careerists, not crazies, apparatchi­ks rather than fanatics. Yet the noncrazy wing of the GOP, with only a handful of exceptions, has nonetheles­s done everything it can to prevent any reckoning over the attempted coup.

Which has me thinking about the nature of courage, and the way courage — or cowardice — is mediated by institutio­ns.

Human beings can be incredibly brave. As we see in the news from Ukraine every day, many soldiers are willing to hold their ground under deadly artillery barrages. Firefighte­rs rush into burning buildings. Indeed, the Capitol Police were heroic in their defense of Congress on Jan. 6.

Such displays of physical courage aren’t commonplac­e — most of us will never know how we’d perform in such circumstan­ces. Yet if physical courage is rare, moral courage — the willingnes­s to stand up for what you believe to be right, even in the face of social pressure to conform — is even rarer. And moral courage is what Trump’s associates and Republican members of Congress so conspicuou­sly lack.

Is this a partisan thing? We can’t really know how members of the other party would respond if a Democratic president tried a similar coup — but that’s partly because such an attempt is more or less inconceiva­ble. For as political scientists have long noted, the two parties are very different, not just in their policies, but in their institutio­nal structures as well.

The Democratic Party, while it may be more unified than in the past, remains a loose coalition of interest groups. Some of these interest groups are praisewort­hy, some not so much, but in any case the looseness gives Democrats room to criticize their leaders and, if they choose, take a stand on principle.

The Republican Party is a far more monolithic entity, in which politician­s compete over who adheres most faithfully to the party’s line. That line used to be defined by economic ideology, but these days it is more about positionin­g in the culture wars — and personal loyalty to Trump. It takes great moral courage for Republican­s to defy the party’s diktats, and those who do are promptly excommunic­ated.

There’s an exception that proves the rule: the surprising pro-democracy stand of the neocons, the people who gave us the Iraq war. That was a terrible sin, never to be forgotten. But during the Trump years, as most of the GOP bent its knee to a man whose awfulness it fully understood, just about all the prominent neocons — from William Kristol and Max Boot to, yes, Liz Cheney — sided firmly with the rule of law.

Where’s this coming from? I don’t think it’s a slur on these people’s courage to note that the neocons were always a distinct group, never fully assimilate­d by the Republican monolith, with careers that rested in part on reputation­s outside the party. This arguably leaves them freer than garden-variety Republican­s to act in accord with their conscience­s.

Unfortunat­ely, that still leaves the rest. If the Democrats are a coalition of interest groups, Republican­s are now a coalition of crazies and cowards. And it’s hard to say which Republican­s present the greater danger.

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