Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Judas, tax cuts and betrayal

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a New York Times columnist.

The denarius, ancient Rome’s silver coin, was supposedly the daily wage of a manual worker. If so, the tax cuts that the richest 1 percent of Americans will receive if the Affordable Care Act is repealed — tax cuts that are, obviously, the real reason for repeal — would amount to the equivalent of around 500 pieces of silver each year.

What inspired this calculatio­n? The spectacle of Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, and Paul Ryan, the House speaker, defending Donald Trump’s firing of James Comey. Everyone understand­s Mr. Comey was fired not because of his misdeeds during the campaign — misdeeds that helped put Mr. Trump in the White House — but because his probe of Russian connection­s with the Trump campaign was accelerati­ng and, presumably, getting too close to home. So this looks very much like the use of presidenti­al power to cover up possible foreign subversion of the U.S. government.

And the two leading Republican­s in Congress are apparently OK with that coverup, because the Trump ascendancy is giving them the chance to do what they always wanted, namely, take health insurance away from millions of Americans while slashing taxes on the wealthy.

So you can see why I find myself thinking of Judas.

For generation­s, Republican­s have impugned their opponents’ patriotism. During the Cold War, they claimed that Democrats were soft on communism; after 9/11, that theywere soft on terrorism.

But now we have what may be the real thing: circumstan­tial evidence that a hostile foreign power may have colluded with a U.S. presidenti­al campaign, and may retain undue influence at the highest levels of our government. And all those self-proclaimed patriots have gone silent, or worse.

Just to be clear, we don’t know for sure that top Trump officials, and maybe even Mr. Trump himself, are Russian puppets. But the evidence is enough to take seriously — think about the fact that Michael Flynn stayed on as national security adviser for weeks after Justice Department officials warned that he was compromise­d and was fired only when the story broke in the press.

And we know how to resolve the remaining uncertaint­y: independen­t investigat­ions conducted by officials with strong legal powers, insulated from partisan political influence.

So here’s where we stood as of Thursday evening: 138 Democrats and independen­ts had called for the appointmen­t of a special prosecutor; just one Republican had joined that call. Another 84 Democrats had called for an independen­t investigat­ion, joined by only six Republican­s. In other words, almost an entire party appears to have decided that potential treason in the cause of tax cuts for the wealthy is no vice. And that’s barely hyperbole.

How did a whole party become so, well, un-American? In some ways conservati­sm is returning to its roots. Much has been made of Mr. Trump’s revival of the term “America First,” the name of a movement opposed to U.S. interventi­on in World War II. What isn’t often mentioned is that many of the most prominent America firsters weren’t just isolationi­sts, they were actively sympatheti­c to foreign dictators; there’s a more or less straight line from Charles Lindbergh wearing the medal he received from Hermann Goring to Mr. Trump’s cordial relations with Rodrigo Duterte, the literally murderous president of the Philippine­s.

But the more proximate issue is the transforma­tion of the Republican Party, which bears little if any resemblanc­e to the institutio­n it used to be, say during the Watergate hearings of the 1970s. Back then, Republican members of Congress were citizens first, partisans second. But today’s GOP is more like a radical, anti-democratic insurgency than a convention­al political party.

Political analysts Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein have been trying to explain this transforma­tion for years, fighting an uphill battle against the false equivalenc­e that still dominates punditry. As they note, the GOP hasn’t just become “ideologica­lly extreme”; it is “dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.”

So it’s naive to expect Republican­s to join forces with Democrats to get to the bottom of the Russia scandal — even if that scandal may strike at the very roots of our national security. Today’s Republican­s just don’t cooperate with Democrats, period. They’d rather work with Vladimir Putin. In fact, some of them probably did.

Maybe I’m being too pessimisti­c. Maybe there are enough Republican­s with a conscience — or, failing that, frightened of electoral backlash — that the attempt to kill the Russia probe will fail.

But it’s time to face the scary reality. Most people now realize, I think, that Donald Trump holds basic American political values in contempt. What we need to realize is that much of his party shares that contempt.

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