Boston Herald

Trump’s a counterfei­t Republican

- By GEORGE F. WILL George Will is a syndicated columnist. In the interest of full disclosure he wanted readers to know that his wife, Mari Will, works for Scott Walker. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@ bostonhera­ld.com.

WASHINGTON — In every town large enough to have two traffic lights there is a bar at the back of which sits the local Donald Trump, nursing his fifth beer and innumerabl­e delusions. Because the actual Donald Trump is wealthy, he can turn himself into an unpreceden­tedly and incorrigib­ly vulgar presidenti­al candidate. It is his right to use his riches as he pleases. His squalid performanc­e and its coarsening of civic life are costs of freedom that an open society must be prepared to pay.

When, however, Trump decided that his next acquisitio­n would be not another casino but the Republican presidenti­al nomination, he tactically and quickly underwent many conversion­s of convenienc­e (concerning abortion, health care, funding Democrats, etc.). His makeover demonstrat­es that he is a counterfei­t Republican and no conservati­ve.

He is an affront to anyone devoted to the project William F. Buckley began six decades ago with the founding in 1955 of National Review — making conservati­sm intellectu­ally respectabl­e and politicall­y palatable. Buckley’s legacy is being betrayed by invertebra­te conservati­ves now saying that although Trump “goes too far,” he has “tapped into something,” and therefore ...

Therefore what? This stance — if a semi-grovel can be dignified as a stance — is a recipe for deserved disaster. Remember, Henry Wallace and Strom Thurmond “tapped into” things.

In 1948, Wallace, FDR’s former vice president, ran as a third-party candidate opposing Harry Truman’s re-election. His campaign became a vehicle for, among others, communists and fellow travelers opposed to Truman’s anti-Soviet foreign policy. Truman persevered, leaders of organized labor cleansed their movement of Soviet sympathize­rs, and Truman was re-elected.

He won also in spite of South Carolina’s Democratic Gov. Thurmond siphoning off Democratic votes (and 39 electoral votes) as a Dixiecrat protesting civil rights commitment­s in the Democratic Party’s platform. Truman won because he kept his party and himself from seeming incoherent and boneless.

Conservati­ves who flinch from forthright­ly marginaliz­ing Trump mistakenly fear alienating a substantia­l Republican cohort. But the a ssumption that today’s Trumpites are Republican­s is unsubstant­iated and implausibl­e. Many are no doubt lightly attached to the political process, preferring entertainm­ent to affiliatio­n. They relish in their candidate’s vituperati­on and share his aversion to facts. From what GOP faction might Trumpites come? The establishm­ent? Social conservati­ves? Unlikely.

They certainly are not Tea Partyers, those earnest, issue-oriented, book-club organizing activists who are passionate about policy. Trump’s aversion to reality was displayed during the Cleveland debate when Chris Wallace asked him for “evidence” to support his claim that Mexico’s government is sending rapists and drug dealers to America. Trump, as usual, offered apoplexy as an argument.

A political party has a right to (in language Trump likes) secure its borders . Indeed, a party has a duty to exclude interloper­s, including cynical opportunis­ts deranged by egotism. This is why closed primaries, although not obligatory, are defensible: Let party members make the choices that define the party and dispense its most precious possession, a presidenti­al nomination. So, the Republican National Committee should immediatel­y stipulate that subsequent Republican debates will be open to any and all — but only — candidates who pledge to support the party’s nominee.

This year’s Republican field is the most impressive since 1980, and perhaps the most talent-rich since the party first had a presidenti­al nominee, in 1856. But 16 candidates are experienci­ng diminishme­nt by associatio­n with the 17th.

Soon the campaign will turn to granular politics, the on-the-ground retail work required by the 1.4 percent of the nation’s population that lives in Iowa and New Hampshire. Try to imagine Trump in an Iowa living room, with a macaroon in one hand and cup of hot chocolate balanced on a knee, observing Midwestern civilities while talking about something other than himself.

Television, which has made Trump (he is one of three candidates, with Mike Huckabee and John Kasich, who have had television shows), will unmake him, turning his shtick into a transconti­nental bore. But not before many voters will have noticed weird vibrations pulsing from the GOP.

So, conservati­ves today should deal with Trump with the firmness Buckley dealt with the John Birch Society in 1962. The society was an extension of a loony businessma­n who said Dwight Eisenhower was “a dedicated, conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy.” In a 5,000-word National Review “excoriatio­n” (Buckley’s word), he excommunic­ated the society from the conservati­ve movement.

Buckley received an approving letter from a subscriber who said, “You have once again given a voice to the conscience of conservati­sm.” The letter was signed, “Ronald Reagan, Pacific Palisades, Cal.”

 ??  ?? TRUMP: His makeover on top issues shows he is not a true conservati­ve.
TRUMP: His makeover on top issues shows he is not a true conservati­ve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States