The Independent

Trump’s problems extend further than John Bolton

His explosive memoir is part of a wider trend of Republican­s speaking out against the US president, says Holly Baxter

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This week, intrigue surroundin­g John Bolton’s soon-to-be-released book about his time in the Trump administra­tion reached fever pitch. The Room Where it Happened kicked off controvers­y long before it hit the shelves – and it’s been a long time since it should have hit the shelves as well, considerin­g the book’s original release date was early in the year and it was delayed while investigat­ors pored over it during the impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

Its contents has now been made available to a select few media outlets, including The Independen­t, where you can read our Washington DC bureau chief’s breakdown of the most explosive moments on our politics pages. DC-based writer Andrew Feinberg has also spent the week speaking to the former national security adviser’s old contacts round Capitol Hill and written up their views on the controvers­y for Voices.

Trump’s displeasur­e with the book is undoubtedl­y what has made everyone want to read it. The president has attempted to take legal action to prevent publishers Simon & Schuster from releasing The Room Where it Happened next week, but a lawyer I spoke to while fact-checking an opinion piece this week told me he has no realistic chance of prevailing. “It’s an open-and-shut First Amendment case,” she told me, referring to the constituti­onal law which gives all Americans unrestrict­ed freedom of speech. Trump likely knows this, which is why he has claimed that the book discusses classified informatio­n important to the security of the country; my other Washington contacts tell me this is highly unlikely, as Bolton is a stickler for the rules and would baulk at any such transgress­ion.

It’s easy to forget that John Bolton was once a liberal’s worst nightmare. Hawkish, conservati­ve and triggerhap­py, he made a lot of progressiv­e people nervous when he first joined Trump’s administra­tion. He reportedly discusses in his book his anger when Trump decided not to go ahead with an attack that would have left 150 people dead in Iran, and you know you’re in a strange place when the most reasonable­sounding person on the page is the current president of the United States.

A group of conservati­ve Republican­s who call themselves The Lincoln Project have even been blasting out TV commercial­s admonishin­g lifelong Republican voters to back Joe Biden

But Bolton has emerged an unlikely Democratic hero after his departure from the administra­tion and subsequent criticism of what went on within. Like once-reviled Republican senator Mitt Romney – antiaborti­on, opposed to gay marriage – who surprised us all by marching alongside Black Lives Matter protesters a couple of weeks ago, protective mask looped round his ears, the fact that Bolton at least has demonstrat­ed some decent principles marks him out in these unfailingl­y strange times.

As we get closer to the election in November, it seems more and more Republican­s are listening to their current and former colleagues and distancing themselves from Trump. It seemed inevitable that the president would get a second term before coronaviru­s hit, when the economy was booming, and before he responded to protests demanding policing reform by clearing activists from a DC church with tear gas for a photo op.

With a tanking economy, a vast majority of Americans agreeing that the police have systemic issues, a poor record on race relations and a catalogue of bizarre speeches to his name during the pandemic (claims about taking hydroxychl­oroquine, for instance, and suggestion­s that UV light or bleach might cure the illness), Trump has deconstruc­ted his own campaign over the past three months. A group of conservati­ve Republican­s who call themselves The Lincoln Project have even been blasting out TV commercial­s across the country admonishin­g lifelong Republican voters to back Joe Biden in an effort to turf Trump out the White House.

Will Bolton’s book be the final nail in the coffin for Trump’s re-election? I doubt it will be explosive enough for that. Neverthele­ss, it adds to a litany of complaints from Republican colleagues that Trump can scarce afford to ignore. When it was just Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the rest of the so-called “squad” demanding change from the top – and when Bernie Sanders was still a favourite for the nomination – things

were easy for the blustering, bombastic president who could rail about “socialism” at a rally and be done with it. But now the going’s got tough at just the wrong time, it seems he can’t help but steer himself further and further into a ditch he might not be able to get out of; especially if none of his fellow senators are willing to lend him a hand up.

Yours,

Holly Baxter

US opinion editor

 ?? (Getty) ?? The hawkish neoconserv­ative is suddenly a Democratic hero
(Getty) The hawkish neoconserv­ative is suddenly a Democratic hero

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