The Jerusalem Post

If liberals hate him, then Trump must be doing something right

- • By CHARLES J. SYKES

If there was one principle that used to unite conservati­ves, it was respect for the rule of law. Not long ago, conservati­ves would have been horrified at wholesale violations of the norms and traditions of our political system, and would have been appalled by a president who showed overt contempt for the separation of powers.

But this week, as if on cue, most of the conservati­ve media fell into line, celebratin­g President Trump’s abrupt dismissal of the FBI director, James Comey, and dismissing the fact that Comey was leading an investigat­ion into the Trump campaign and its ties to Russia. “Dems in Meltdown Over Comey Firing,” declared a headline on Fox News, as Tucker Carlson gleefully replayed clips of Democrats denouncing the move. “It’s just insane actually,” he said, referring to their reactions. On Fox and talk radio, the message was the same, with only a few conservati­ves willing to sound a discordant or even cautious note.

The talk-show host Rush Limbaugh was positively giddy, opening his monologue on Wednesday by praising Trump for what he called his “epic trolling” of liberals. “This is great,” Limbaugh declared. “Can we agree that Donald Trump is probably enjoying this more than anybody wants to admit or that anybody knows? So he fires Comey yesterday. Who’s he meet with today? He’s meeting with the Soviet, the Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov! I mean, what an epic troll this is.”

Given the enthusiasm of the president’s apologists, it is likely that much of Trump’s base will similarly rally to him as it has in the past.

But perhaps most important, we saw once again how conservati­sm, with its belief in ordered liberty, is being eclipsed by something different: Loathing those who loath the president. Rabid anti-anti-Trumpism.

In a lamentably overlooked monologue this month, Limbaugh embraced the new reality in which conservati­ve ideas and principles had been displaced by anti-liberalism. For years, Limbaugh ran what he called the “Institute for Advanced Conservati­ve Studies.” But in the Trump era, he told his audience, he has changed that to the “Institute for Advanced Anti-Leftist Studies.”

With Trump in the White House, conservati­ve principles were no longer the point. “How many times during the campaign did I warn everybody Trump is not a conservati­ve? Multiple times a day,” Limbaugh said. “How many times have I told you: ‘Do not expect Trump to be a conservati­ve? He isn’t one.’”

He went on to emphasize that the campaign was not about conservati­sm, because that’s not what Trump is about.

That was a remarkable admission, but it is also a key to understand­ing what is happening on the right. While there are those like Sean Hannity who are reliable cheerleade­rs for all things Trump, much of the conservati­ve news media is now less pro-Trump than it is anti-anti-Trump. The distinctio­n is important, because anti-anti-Trumpism has become the new safe space for the right.

Here is how it works: Rather than defend Trump’s specific actions, his conservati­ve champions change the subject to (1) the biased “fake news” media, (2) over-thetop liberals, (3) hypocrites on the left, (4) anyone else victimizin­g Trump or his supporters and (5) whatabouti­sm, as in “What about Obama?” “What about Clinton?”

For the anti-anti-Trump pundit, whatever the allegation against Trump, whatever his blunders or foibles, the other side is always worse.

But the real heart of anti-anti-Trumpism is the delight in the frustratio­n and anger of his opponents. Trump’s base is unlikely to hold him either to promises or tangible achievemen­ts, because conservati­ve politics is now less about ideas or accomplish­ments than it is about making the right enemies cry out in anguish.

Trump’s most vocal supporters don’t have to defend his specific actions as long as they make “liberal heads explode,” or as Sarah Palin put it so memorably, “It’s really funny to me to see the splodey heads keep sploding.” If liberals hate something, the argument goes, then it must be wonderful and worthy of aggressive defense. Each controvers­y reinforces the divisions and the distrust, and Trump counts on that.

For many in the conservati­ve movement, this sort of anti-anti-Trumpism is the solution to the painful conundrum posed by the Trump presidency. With a vast majority of conservati­ve voters and listeners solidly behind Trump, conservati­ve critics of the president find themselves isolated and under siege. But, as Damon Linker noted, anti-anti-Trumpism “allows the right to indulge its hatred of liberals and liberalism while sidesteppi­ng the need for a reckoning with the disaster of the Trump administra­tion itself.”

This is also a much sounder business model than airing doubts about the president. Conservati­ve media is, of course, a business that relies on ratings, and few things generate ratings more quickly than bashing liberals. In this case, it is a far better business model for talk show hosts to play down Mr. Trump’s failures while piling on his enemies.

The ad hominem argument is rightly regarded as a logical fallacy because it substitute­s personal attacks for a discussion of the argument someone is making. But on many talk shows, including Limbaugh’s, nearly every argument is ad hominem. Instead of offering statistics and building a case, it is easier to simply make fun of a Trump critic like Rep. Maxine Waters, or shrug off a negative report because it came from the “lamestream media.” NOT SURPRISING­LY, the vast majority of airtime on conservati­ve media is not taken up by issues or explanatio­ns of conservati­ve approaches to markets or need to balance liberty with order. Why bother with such stuff, when there were personalit­ies to be mocked and left-wing moonbats to be ridiculed?

What may have begun as a policy or a tactic in opposition has long since become a reflex. But there is an obvious price to be paid for essentiall­y becoming a party devoted to trolling. In the long run, it’s hard to see how a party dedicated to liberal tears can remain a movement based on ideas or centered on principles.

Conservati­ves will care less about governing and more about scoring “wins” — and inflicting losses on the left — no matter how hollow the victories or flawed the policies. Ultimately, though, this will end badly because it is a moral and intellectu­al dead end, and very likely a political one as well.

The right’s reaction to firing of Comey hardly bodes well. Even conservati­ves who are still smarting from his handling of Hillary Clinton’s emails should recognize that the timing of Comey’s abrupt dismissal in the midst of a growing investigat­ion into Russian meddling raises fundamenta­l questions about the rule of the law and the possibilit­y that justice is being obstructed.

As the right doubles down on anti-anti-Trumpism, it will find itself goaded into defending and rationaliz­ing ever more outrageous conduct just as long as it annoys CNN and the left.

In many ways anti-anti-Trumpism mirrors Donald Trump himself, because at its core there are no fixed values, no respect for constituti­onal government or ideas of personal character, only a free-floating nihilism cloaked in insult, mockery and bombast.

Needless to say, this is not a form of conservati­sm that Edmund Burke, or even Barry Goldwater, would have recognized.

Who needs conservati­ve principles when there are left-wing moonbats to ridicule?

Charles J. Sykes, a former talk-show host in Wisconsin, is the author of the forthcomin­g “How the Right Lost Its Mind.”

 ?? (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE PROTEST President Donald Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey on Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles last Friday.
(Lucy Nicholson/Reuters) PEOPLE PROTEST President Donald Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey on Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles last Friday.

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