Chicago Sun-Times

Trump is the strongman the GOP always wanted

- GENE LYONS eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com

How much power it will retain after November remains in doubt, but the Republican Party as historical­ly understood is vanishing before our eyes.

What remains is the Party of Trump, an authoritar­ian cult of personalit­y.

As I write, the president of the United States has been engaged in a barefaced effort at jury tampering in a trial directly affecting his personal interest. While a jury deliberate­d 18 counts of tax evasion and bank fraud against former campaign manager Paul Manafort, Trump daily assailed the prosecutor­s as “thugs” and their case as a politicall­y motivated fraud.

It was a direct attempt to obstruct justice. According to one standard definition: “A person commits the crime of jury tampering if, with intent to influence a juror’s vote, opinion, decision or other action in the case, he attempts directly or indirectly to communicat­e with a juror other than as part of the proceeding­s in the trial of the case.”

Whether via Twitter or TV, it’s all the same. Most legal observers thought prosecutor­s played a lay-down hand against Manafort: $15 million stashed in offshore bank accounts and no income taxes paid. Manifestly false applicatio­ns for more millions in loans. Accountant­s and bankers admitting chicanery.

For all of that, the jury did its duty.

Even so, Trump’s brazen interferen­ce is Third World strongman stuff, a direct attack upon the rule of law. Even Vladimir Putin pretends to respect due process. And it might easily have succeeded. Only a couple of Trumpist true believers could have deadlocked the jury. A hung jury would not have been a total surprise.

What’s more, can there be any doubt of the president’s intent? The mind of man can scarcely conceive the uproar that would have resulted if Bill Clinton or Barack Obama had engaged in such an effort — which, of course, neither man did.

And yet, not a single Republican avatar of law and order uttered a discouragi­ng word. Not one. After all, who can stop him? To some degree, we’ve all become inured to the neverendin­g Mel Brooks movie that is the Trump administra­tion — in many ways more farcical than sinister.

Even so, they’re scared to death of him. The general silence is remarkable.

Also totally unsurprisi­ng. Writing in The Daily Beast, Mike Tomasky argues that contrary to convention­al wisdom, “D.C. Republican­s don’t fail to object to Trump because they’re afraid of his base. They refuse to stand up to Trump because they like what Trump is doing.”

Tomasky describes the party’s slow-motion stampede toward authoritar­ianism at greater length in The New York Review of Books. It commenced with Newt Gingrich’s Clinton-era memo urging Republican­s to describe Democrats with terms like “radical,” “sick” and “traitors” — basically enemies of God and America.

Mimicked by Rush Limbaugh and eventually by Sean Hannity and other right-wing media shills, it was a strategy to delegitimi­ze the opposition, making compromise suspect. Tomasky catalogs more recent results: “The shutting down of the recount in Florida in 2000. The aggressive gerrymande­ring, first engineered by Tom DeLay. The Hastert Rule, holding that bills could pass the House only with a majority of Republican­s, and not with bipartisan support. The attacks on voting rights — straight-up attempts to make it hard or even impossible for certain citizens to vote.”

I suppose it’s merely ironic that the so-called “Hastert Rule” — which led to the near-paralysis and deep unpopulari­ty of Congress — is the namesake of a stern moralist who went to prison after paying hush money to a high school wrestler he’d molested in his coaching days.

Then came the blocking of Obama Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland. Republican­s could simply have voted him down, Tomasky argues, but wanted to prove “that they could exercise public contempt for the democratic allocation of power. And win.”

Trump then emerged as the strongman the party really wanted.

Did Texas Sen. Ted Cruz once describe Trump as “utterly amoral,” “a pathologic­al liar” who “doesn’t know the difference between truth and lies?” Yes, but running for re-election in Texas, today he’s all aboard the Trump train.

Did former GOP presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney once call Trump “a phony, a fraud”? Yes, he did, also pointing to “the bullying, the greed, the showing off, the misogyny (and) the absurd third-grade theatrics.”

Ever the gentleman, the president later described Romney “begging” for his 2012 endorsemen­t. “I could have said, ‘Mitt, drop to your knees’ — he would have dropped to his knees,” Trump said.

Running for the Senate in Utah, Romney’s back on his knees, confidentl­y predicting Trump’s 2020 re-election.

In short, don’t kid yourself. Trump’s offenses against the rule of law mean nothing to these jokers. Manafort too is a perfect symbol for today’s GOP.

When push comes to shove, all that really matters is tax cuts for Republican donors of extreme wealth, persons literally mad with greed. That and raw political power.

The good news is they can’t call off the November election.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Donald Trump pauses while speaking during a rally Tuesday in Charleston, W.Va.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Donald Trump pauses while speaking during a rally Tuesday in Charleston, W.Va.
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