The Scotsman

Trump pardons those who pay fealty to him

Huckster who smeared Obama’s mother gets full pardon over illegal campaign donations,

- says Michelle Goldberg

During Barack Obama’s administra­tion, the conservati­ve author and activist Dinesh D’souza wrote a book, Obama’s America, full of gross speculatio­ns about the sex life of the president’s mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, who was a pioneering anthropolo­gist. “Ann’s sexual adventurin­g may seem a little surprising in view of the fact that she was a large woman who kept getting larger,” wrote D’souza. He described her as a “playgirl” who used “her American background and economic and social power to purchase the romantic attention of third-world men”.

D’souza’s insinuatio­ns had little to do with his ostensible thesis, which was that Obama sought to undermine America. It was simply a timeworn insult – calling someone’s mom fat and promiscuou­s – that tells us nothing of Obama’s family, but a lot about D’souza’s character.

Besides being a huckster and a sexist weasel, D’souza is a felon who, in 2014, pleaded guilty to routing illegal campaign donations through a woman he was having an affair with, and the woman’s husband. (At the time, D’souza was married and serving as president of the evangelica­l King’s College. His ex-wife would later accuse him of physical abuse.) For his crime, he spent eight months in a half-way house. On Thursday, US president Donald Trump gave him a full pardon, tweeting that D’souza had been “treated very unfairly by our government”.

Trump’s action – a clear abuse of his pardoning power for political ends – serves several purposes. Most seriously, the D’souza pardon, like those of former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio and former Dick Cheney aide Scooter Libby, is a message to Trump confederat­es facing legal trouble. It says that if they stay strong, he’ll take care of them. As a former federal prosecutor, Joyce Alene, pointed out on Twitter, D’souza was convicted of one of the same crimes, a campaign finance violation, that Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen is now being investigat­ed for.

The pardon is also a culture war smoke bomb, distractin­g from manifold other scandals and disasters: the study estimating that around 4,600 people died in Puerto Rico as a result of Hurricane Maria; outrage over migrant children taken from their parents at the border; and an incipient trade war with our allies. Adding to the diversiona­ry spectacle, on Thursday, Trump told reporters that he was considerin­g commuting the sentence of former governor Rod Blagojevic­h of Illinois, a one-time contestant on Trump’s Celebrity Apprentice, and pardoning Martha Stewart, who hosted a Celebrity Apprentice spin-off.

Of course, in writing about Trump’s distractio­n, I’m complicit in it. But it’s too serious to ignore. Dangling the possibilit­y of a pardon for Stewart and a commutatio­n for Blagojevic­h is a reality TV show gambit – call it “Celebrity Impunity”. But it’s also more than that. Trump is trying to harness the power of fame to delegitimi­se his enemies in law enforcemen­t.

Stewart, after all, was prosecuted by former FBI director James Comey; one conservati­ve writer argued that Trump should pardon her partly for that reason. Others on the right have lately taken to defending Blagojevic­h, a Democrat, as a way of underminin­g Robert Mueller, who was FBI director when Blagojevic­h was arrested. D’souza was prosecuted by a third Trump nemesis, former US attorney Preet Bharara. On Thursday, D’souza, who is Indian-american, gloated on Twitter that Bharara “wanted to destroy a fellow Indian-american to advance his career. Then he got fired and I got pardoned”.

The pardon of D’souza functions as revenge in more ways than one. When ABC cancelled the sitcom starring Roseanne Barr, Trump’s most high-profile celebrity supporter, for her racist insult of former Obama official Valerie Jarrett, it sent a message that the entertainm­ent industry will hold the line against overt bigotry, even at the risk of alienating some Trump supporters. By pardoning D’souza, who has said more disgusting things than Barr, Trump sends a rejoinder: His supporters can cross any lines they please.

D’souza, who made his name in the 1990s fighting campus political correctnes­s, once had a reputation as a middlebrow conservati­ve provocateu­r, but he’s really more gutter-dwelling troll. His 1995 book The End of Racism argued: “In summary, the American slave was treated like property, which is to say, pretty well.” He also called for the repeal of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. During the Obama years he, like Trump, became a full-bore conspiracy theorist, accusing the president of spearheadi­ng a third-world scheme to subvert America.

In the Trump era, he’s become even worse. He mocked survivors of the Parkland, Florida, high school shooting who cried after the Florida Legislatur­e voted down an assault weapons ban, tweeting, “Worst news since their parents told them to get summer jobs.” (He later apologised.) He described Rosa Parks as an “over-rated” Democrat. He played a major role in spreading the lie that billionair­e financier George Soros, who was a Jewish child in Nazi-occupied Hungary, was a Nazi collaborat­or.

Now Trump has singled this man out for grace. One ex-white House official denied there was “any grand strategic reasoning” behind the pardon, which may well be true. But even if Trump was acting out of instinct rather than calculatio­n, he has an intuitive ability to speak to his supporters’ dark impulses.

The fact that D’souza is utterly undeservin­g of a pardon might be part of the point; it signals that fealty to the president transcends all other values. In his new book The Road to Unfreedom, historian Timothy Snyder quotes the Russian fascist philosophe­r Ivan Ilyin, who is beloved by Vladimir Putin’s circle. Fascism, Ilyin wrote approvingl­y, is “a redemptive excess of patriotic arbitrarin­ess”. Trump has almost certainly never read this line, but he understand­s it. ©

“A timeworn insult – calling someone’s mom fat and promiscuou­s – that tells us nothing about Obama’s family, but a lot about D’souza”

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