New York Post

Swamp Royals

Our ‘leaders’ behave like better-than-us lords

- ALLAN RICHARZ Allan Richarz is a Tokyo-based writer.

IF there is one certainty in our pandemic hell, it’s that politician­s will continue to flout the draconian rules that they impose on the rest of us. Elitist disconnect, certainly, but the ultimate reason it happens is that we American serfs let our political betters get away with it.

This weekend, it was revealed that White House coronaviru­stask-force member Dr. Deborah Birx had traveled out of state to a vacation home with family members from multiple households the day after Thanksgivi­ng. That is, after she admonished Americans to only celebrate Thanksgivi­ng with those in their immediate household and piously noting that she was “making the personal sacrifices not to infect my parents and my pregnant daughter.”

It is a familiar story in the never-ending, lather-rinse-repeat coronaviru­s news cycle: Public officials solemnly warn the public to wear masks, stay home and avoid family, only for stories to emerge of those same officials disregardi­ng their own advice, to be followed by the most perfunctor­y of empty apologies.

There is a more troubling element at play in these stories than the high-handed arrogance and entitlemen­t of our political class: that the American public not only accepts such actions but displays an almost servile fetish to be ruled. There is no sustained anger at politician­s for each hypocritic­ally broken coronaviru­s protocol. Nor are there serious demands for resignatio­ns. “Don’t tread on me” has simply evolved to “Thank you, sir, may I have another?”

While California Gov. Gavin Newsom slowly ground businesses in his state to dust with increasing­ly restrictiv­e coronaviru­s protocols, photos revealed that the political scion was rubbing elbows with health lobbyists at a posh Napa restaurant. In Colorado, Denver Mayor Michael Hancock told residents to “stay home” and “avoid travel” for Thanksgivi­ng, all while sitting in an airport to fly to Houston to celebrate the holiday with family in Mississipp­i.

Senior congressio­nal leaders violating shutdown orders and masking rules to get haircuts. Mask-less birthday parties for dozens of the politicall­y connected in New York. “Can we not have dinner?” sniff California lawmakers caught in multihouse­hold gatherings. Each passing week shows how our political elite feels no compunctio­n about ignoring the rules inflicted on the broader public.

And for good reason. Apart from a tiny blip on social media or a 15-second hit on the local news, there are no consequenc­es for politician­s breaking their own guidelines. So inured or indifferen­t are Americans that far from demanding accountabi­lity or resignatio­ns, they greet the hypocritic­al actions of politician­s with a shrug.

It is part of a shift in our national character — toward treating politician­s in America as quasi-regal rulers — that long predates the pandemic. While our Constituti­on proscribes titles of nobility, analogues have inevitably cropped up to flatter the egos of the political elite. Politician­s are slavishly referred to by talking heads and others by their former titles long after departing from office.

One might expect a politician to keep a memento or two upon returning to private life, but there is something inappropri­ately regal about those taking their titles with them. Secretary Clinton, Governor Palin and so on. Often, it is well-intentione­d, but neverthele­ss misplaced,

bootlickin­g by toadies and hangers-on, but also common from those in news media. “Speaker” Gingrich has not held that position in nearly two decades; perhaps it is time for pundits to return the PhD-holding Gingrich to mere “Doctor.”

While patrician Republican­s and DC lifers may turn up their noses at President Trump’s “unpresiden­tial” bearing, he has, at least temporaril­y, pierced the foppish façade of treating the presidency with magisteria­l reverence and put an almost human face on the office; one consequenc­e of which was a rabidly partisan press all too willing to grill the president over the slightest of trespass; the aura of the presidency nullified with Trump in office.

Most every other politician, however, will skate without a fraction of the pushback from media or the public. Rather than be hounded over his disastrous nursing-home policies, Gov. Cuomo will simply yell at reporters and sit down for goofball CNN interviews with his brother in between accepting a baffling array of awards.

We can blame a supplicant media or the entitlemen­t of an outof-touch political class, but ultimately, the lion’s share of the blame rests with a public that does not demand more of elected officials or push for greater accountabi­lity when politician­s refuse to practice what they preach.

 ??  ?? Dr. Hypocrite: Deborah Birx vacationed with family from multiple households after badgering the rest of us not to do just that.
Dr. Hypocrite: Deborah Birx vacationed with family from multiple households after badgering the rest of us not to do just that.

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