Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trumpism is the end of politics

- Keith C. Burris Keith C. Burris is the former editor, vice president and editorial director of Block Newspapers (burriscolu­mn@gmail.com).

The speakershi­p election that ultimately, finally, resulted in the election of Kevin McCarthy was something new, different, and disturbing. The election of a speaker has been contested and controvers­ial before. It has gone to many ballots before.

But never before with no real opposition. With no issue at stake. To no purpose whatsoever.

Someone said the 15 ballots and many concession­s (to the far right) were merely to humiliate Mr. McCarthy. But, if so, why? What was his sin? He is a loyal Republican and a loyal Trumper.

But, and this is the real gist of it, he just isn’t Trumpy enough. He isn’t pure enough. He’s not really a barn burner. He’s still a bit of a politician.

What is the faith to which McCarthy was insufficie­ntly loyal? Trumpian nihilism; populist nihilism.

We have had many forms of populism in this country through the years. But never before one that attempts to prove its compassion for the working man by tearing down all that protects him.

That is all that the speaker election was about, and sadly, all that McCarthy has now obliged himself to be about: To obstruct, to sabotage, and to destroy. There is no positive agenda; no proper political agenda at all.

Ronald Reagan had an agenda. Its economics were not good for the country and badly hurt the working class. But he practiced his form of politics.

So did Newt Gingrich. Gingrich is a flim-flam man. But he won the House with a program. The Contract with America, in 1994, made promises and more or less followed through on them.

Even the Tea Party had an agenda. It was Reaganism and Gingrichis­m on steroids, with lots of anger and false nostalgia mixed in. But “give us back our country,” phony or reactionar­y as it may sometimes be, is different from “tear it all down.”

The radicals in McCarthy’s caucus are on a continuum with the January 6 rioters and insurrecti­onists. Not all of the former

were also the latter, but the instinct is common to all: Obstruct, sabotage, and destroy.

Populist nihilists have little precedent in American history, except for some of the student left and radicals of the 1960s, who thought, we can’t fix a system this corrupt, so rip it down. This is what we will do for you, forgotten, lost Americans.

The sheer arrogance, ignorance and vapidity of the populist right today matches that of the left then. There is no philosophy, no program, no legislativ­e agenda, no plan for progress, no willingnes­s to converse or to compromise. Just: Tear down.

This is the triumph of nihilism; of a politics that is not about anything. Reaganism and Gingrichis­m were regressive forms of politics. This is the end of politics.

There is another force that has corroded our politics. And that is the banality, ugliness, and moral rootlessne­ss of our culture. I thought of this, oddly perhaps, after the death of Barbara Walters. I grant that she was a trail blazer and a person of great tenacity and will. But this is precisely why I was left thinking, “She could have done so much more.”

She was an often brilliant and almost always fearless interviewe­r. And she did interview presidents and dictators. But I wish she could have done more of that and less of her celebrity and “how-do-you-feel” interviews, in which she was obliged to probe the half-baked views of stars on matters beyond their ken. She could have been Edward R. Murrow. Instead, Murrow, in his last years, became a kind of Barbra Walters, doing celebrity interviews.

It’s a testament to the steady decline of journalism over the last 50 to 60 years, matching the decline of politics and ending with the triumph of “social” media. Social media is the name we now give to what used to be called gossip and prejudice.

At a time when newspapers are perishing by the day, one looks at Walters and her generation of news broadcaste­rs and thinks: Even if pap is what we want and expect, you could have given us something better.

At least “The View,” is often a discussion of things that matter to Americans. So good on Walters for that.

Finally, good on Ralph Nader, who at 88 is still in there pitching and has started a newspaper. It is called “The Capitol Hill Citizen,” and its September issue is full of stories that are actually substantiv­e: corporate power and the ways it works in D.C.; legislator­s who don’t legislate; our addiction to our electronic devices; wokism; our government’s mismanagem­ent of NATO; unsafe highways.

It’s a print product. And its motto is: “Democracy dies in broad daylight.”

 ?? Susan Walsh/Associated Press ?? Kevin McCarthy
Susan Walsh/Associated Press Kevin McCarthy

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