The Palm Beach Post

Politics and the presidency in the new post-truth era

- She writes for the Washington Post.

Ruth Marcus

Welcome to — brace yourself — the post-truth presidency.

“Facts are stubborn things,” said John Adams in 1770, defending British soldiers accused in the Boston Massacre, “and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinatio­ns, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”

Or so we thought, until we elected to the presidency a man consistent­ly heedless of truth and impervious to fact-checking.

Oxford Dictionari­es last month selected post-truth — “relating to or denoting circumstan­ces in which objective facts are less influentia­l in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief ” — as the internatio­nal word of the year, and for good reason.

The practice of posttruth — untrue assertion piled on untrue assertion — helped get Donald Trump to the White House.

As Politico’s Susan Glasser wrote in a sobering assessment for the Brookings Institutio­n, “Even fact-checking perhaps the most untruthful candidate of our lifetime didn’t work; the more news outlets did it, the less the facts reso- nated.”

So there is no reason to think Trump is about to suddenly truth-up.

Three data points from last week:

First, quasi-fired Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i at Harvard:

“You guys took everything that Donald Trump said so literally,” he said. “The American people didn’t. They understood it. They understood that sometimes — when you have a conversati­on with people ... you’re going to say things, and sometimes you don’t have all the facts to back it up.”

Second, this assertion from Trump supporter/ CNN commentato­r Scottie Nell Hughes on the Diane Rehm Show: “People that say that facts are facts — they’re not really facts ... there’s no such thing, unfortunat­ely, anymore of facts. And so Mr. Trump’s tweet amongst a certain crowd ... are truth.”

Finally, the president-elect himself, who at a rally to celebrate his bribing of Carrier to keep some jobs in the United States, explained that he was impelled to act by a supporter who had been naive enough to take Trump’s promises seriously.

Watching the evening news, Trump said, he saw the Carrier worker say: “‘No, we’re not leaving, because Donald Trump promised us that we’re not leaving,’ and I never thought I made that promise. Not with Carrier.”

Then, Trump said, “they played my statement, and I said, ‘Carrier will never leave.’ But that was a euphemism. I was talking about Carrier like all other companies from here on in.”

This was a telling moment, and not just because Trump doesn’t understand what euphemism means. The episode simultaneo­usly shows Trump, confronted with Trump on tape, willing to recognize reality and Trump telling us straightfo­rwardly that his promises are not to be taken seriously. They are truthphemi­sms.

Today we have the conjunctio­n of a president unconstrai­ned by facts with a media environmen­t siloed into partisan echo chambers and polluted by fake news.

The journalist’s challenge is not to tire in refuting the torrent of lies. The citizen’s challenge is to remain vigilant against the enticing lure of post-truth politics, to recall the admonition of our second president even as our 45th seeks to prove his wisdom an outmoded relic of a prepost-truth era.

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