The Sentinel-Record

How can you stand by a president with no heart?

- Micheal Gerson

“O mother

What shall I cry?

We demand a committee, a representa­tive committee, a committee of investigat­ion

RESIGN RESIGN RESIGN”

— T.S. Eliot, “Difficulti­es of a Statesman”

WASHINGTON — It is ironic that Steve

Bannon, the alt-right conscience of the

White House, was dismissed at the moment of his triumph. President Trump’s recantatio­n of his staff-enforced moral clarity on the Charlottes­ville clash was a high point for the Breitbart worldview. About that unequivoca­l condemnati­on of Nazis, racists and murder? Never mind. The left is just as bad. Both sides share the blame.

This might be defensible — if you leave out the 400 years of oppression, segregatio­n, violence and cruelty that black people have experience­d in North America. If you leave out a bloody Civil War started by slave interests to defend an economic system based on theft of labor and the lash. If you leave out the millions shot, gassed and incinerate­d under the Nazi flag, their wedding rings and gold fillings carefully collected by their killers. If you leave out every grave of every American who fought and died to defeat fascism and militarism.

So moral equivalenc­e is an option — for those who are willfully blind to history and have a shriveled emptiness where their soul once resided.

This is now, sadly, an accurate descriptio­n of America’s 45th president, who felt compelled to reveal his true conviction­s. Such compulsion has the virtue of honesty. It has the drawback (from Trump’s perspectiv­e) of leaving his defenders without excuse.

Following the departure of Bannon, the question has become: “Why should anyone who doesn’t agree with Bannon stay at the White House?”

There are, of course, some true believers who constitute a deep state of lunacy and malice. And it would be difficult for relatives to resign in protest from the family. But consider poor chief economic adviser Gary Cohn and Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao, standing beside Trump during his moment of sympathy for the “very fine people” at a white supremacis­t rally. (Cohn was “somewhere between appalled and furious,” according to sources who talked to Axios.) Or consider poor chief of staff John Kelly, who watched helplessly as message discipline swerved into the alt-right abyss.

But “poor” is not quite the right adjective. People with jobs at the White House or in the Cabinet are not victims. They hold positions of public influence and trust, with their primary duty owed to the United States Constituti­on (go and look at the oath they take), not to the president.

Loyalty to the president is a good thing, in the proper context. It is rooted in gratitude for the opportunit­y of a lifetime. There is a natural tendency, I can attest as a former White House staffer, to defend the leader you know from attacks by outsiders who know him not at all. Being an assistant to the president or a Cabinet officer is the chance to do great good — a chance that may never come again. Besides, the president won an election and has the right to set his own agenda.

But Trump is knocking out the props that support this type of reasoning. He is a president who shows precious little downward loyalty, frequently subjecting his closest aides to public humiliatio­n as a kind of management tool. The chance to do great good is dwindling day by day, as Trump systematic­ally alienates natural allies and embitters enemies through compulsive taunting. His disordered character is preventing him from pursuing any sort of mandate that his election might have represente­d.

And it is not possible for a Cabinet officer or White House staffer to comfort himself or herself that “At least the president’s heart is good.” That is something I did not doubt when serving George W. Bush. Now Trump has opened his own chest for all to see. And the cavity is horrifying­ly empty.

Every additional day of standing next to Trump — physically and metaphoric­ally — destroys reputation and diminishes moral standing. The rationaliz­ations are no longer credible. But resignatio­n, in contrast, would be a contributi­on to the common good — showing that principled leadership in service to the Constituti­on is still possible, even in the age of Trump. When loyalty requires corruption, it is time to leave.

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