The Record (Troy, NY)

How the president lost his cover

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Dec. 1, 2017, will be remembered as the day when the vast majority of Americans fully grasped the consequenc­es of the 2016 elections. They installed a man in the White House “likely to be under investigat­ion for criminalit­y for a very, very long time to come.” And they gave power to a Republican Party whose only purpose is to comfort the already extremely comfortabl­e.

The quotation above, from Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric against Hillary Clinton, is now a better fit for his own circumstan­ces than ever. The day after Michael Flynn’s guilty plea on Friday, Trump compounded his legal jeopardy with a tweet suggesting that (contrary to what he had said before) he knew Flynn, his one- time national security adviser, had lied to the FBI.

Trump’s lawyers will keep trying to explain his tweet away, but his overall vulnerabil­ity on obstructin­g justice has increased exponentia­lly.

But it’s almost as important that Friday was also the day Senate Republican leaders brought forth a tax bill heralding the death of anything resembling a populist form of conservati­sm within the Republican Party. Plutocracy will now be the GOP’s calling card. Facing one of the most scandalous special-interest tax bills in a long history of such measures, even supposedly moderate members of the party caved in before the power of big money.

Republican­s proved one other thing: What they say when they are out of power should never be believed again. Their progressiv­e opponents, in turn, should never feel constraine­d in the future to limit their own ambitions out of deference to empty slogans about the superiorit­y of bipartisan­ship.

When President Obama was in office, conservati­ves waxed hysterical about the horrors of deficits by way of limiting government’s ability to help the needy or expand health insurance coverage. They spoke over and over about how terrible it was to pass bills on a partisan basis and how their foes should govern from “the center.”

Now the GOP has the votes, all those statements are inoperativ­e. The party is running roughshod over democratic accountabi­lity and falling short of even minimal expectatio­ns of congressio­nal decorum.

The leaders of “the world’s greatest deliberati­ve body,” as the Senate pretentiou­sly calls itself, no longer feel any obligation even to provide legible copies of complex legislatio­n. The chicken scratches scribbled on the margins of their tax giveaway signed away any legitimacy these politician­s can claim for their political project.

And deficits? Ah, deficits. They matter not a whit when there is money to pass out to corporatio­ns, rich heirs, private jet owners and the beer lobby represente­d by the son of one of our fine senators. But deficits will matter again soon, when Republican­s will insist that they have no choice but to slash programs for the elderly, the sick, and the poor.

One salutary outcome of this episode is that Trump showed how nonsensica­l were the widely repeated assertions that he was outside the Republican mainstream. We now know he is just a flamboyant­ly clownish and unconscion­ably mean version of an old-fashioned corporate conservati­ve.

There is not an authentica­lly populist bone in this billionair­e’s body. He regularly demonstrat­es his utter contempt for working people by treating them as rubes. He seems to think that racist gestures and malicious comments about immigrants and Muslims will distract workingcla­ss voters from how far he is tilting government away from their interests and toward those of his family and his rich friends.

Trump and his party will learn how many of the Americans they are taking for granted are much smarter than this and know when someone is selling them out -- because, sadly, it’s something they are familiar with.

This is why the coincidenc­e of the tax bill’s passage and Flynn’s decision to cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller is so dangerous to Trump: The president’s populist mask is slipping at the very moment when he most needs to rally the troops. Flynn, who cherished the phrase “lock her up,” came face to face with the slammer himself and decided that loyalty to this most unfaithful of leaders was not worth the price. About this, at least, Flynn is right.

But don’t count on Republican politician­s abandoning Trump quickly now that their tax victory is in sight. They and the president have a lot more in common than either side wants to admit. The primary loyalty they share is not to God or country or republican virtue. It is to the private accumulati­on of money, and this is a bond not easily broken.

E. J. Dionne’s email address is ejdionne@washpost.com. Twitter: @ EJDionne.

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EJ Dionne Columnist

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