Call & Times

This was Bannon’s brilliant strategy at work

- Alexandra Petri writes the ComPost blog, offering a lighter take on the news and opinions of the day. She is the author of "A Field Guide to Awkward Silences."

Uncle Henry, you've been telling me for months that Steve Bannon was a strategic genius. Can you remind me again why?

"Oh, yes, he is, absolutely. The man gets results. He has 2040 vision. Not bad vision — I realize that sounds like bad vision — but I mean it in the sense that he is thinking 23 years down the road, to the year 2040." Oh. "He has thrown away the chessboard and is playing the whole game using only his mind! Which is sharp as a Bic pen." Is that, like, very sharp? "He went to Harvard! As he is continuall­y reminding people, the way a smart man who people can tell immediatel­y is smart is forced to do, just constantly name-drop all the places he went to school."

Peter King has said he "looks like a disheveled drunk who wandered onto the political stage." "That's all noise." So what happened in Alabama? "Well, he picked a candidate who was a true conservati­ve, Judge Roy Moore, to run against Luther Strange, Jeff Sessions's hand-picked successor." Strange. "Yes, that was the name of the man he ran against." Is Judge Roy Moore a real judge? "Well, he used to be before they removed him twice for being a true conservati­ve." Conservati­ve how? "Well, he [starts winking a lot] believed America was greatest in the past."

That's - is that what a conservati­ve does now . . . ?

"Yes, the past [wink wink] was where it was at."

This doesn't seem like a good way of appealing to voters from a historical­ly disadvanta­ged demographi­c.

"It seems to work on white women just fine."

But are there not also black women in Alabama?

"Let's table that for now. Anyway, Steve Bannon, in his wisdom, selected Judge Roy Moore, a man who believed America was greatest in the 1790s, when there were no malls to ban you, and everyone was trying to court 14-year-olds before dying from the complicati­ons of a surgery performed with no anesthesia or sterilizat­ion whatsoever, and also slavery."

Wait, are these good things or bad things about Moore?

"I am just telling you the genius of Steve Bannon's strategy."

Well, was Moore a good candidate?

"Before the race ended, he was credibly accused of molesting teenage girls."

And how did Steve Bannon respond?

"He kept him in the race and tried to discredit his accusers using the website Breitbart.com." I see. "This was his brilliant strategy." Did it work? "It almost did, is the thing." I assume people denounced Roy Moore and said they did not want to be associated with him?

"Well, that is complicate­d. They did at first, but then it looked like he was going to win, and then they came back and said, "Oh, never mind, we've evolved on this whole 'maybe don't go after children' issue." President Donald Trump supported him."

It seems like it would be a serious problem for the party to do something like that. "You might think so." Does Steve Bannon think so? "Steve Bannon has a plan that is bigger than any one of us."

Was it Steve Bannon's plan that Roy Moore ride to the polls on a horse but, like, very badly?

"That horse did look very uncomforta­ble."

If I had to carry a man credibly accused of preying on teenagers to the polls on my back, I would look uncomforta­ble, too.

"We are getting derailed here from Steve Bannon's genius." He is one? "Oh yes, if you ignore all evidence to the contrary."

There is a lot of evidence to the contrary. And now the Republican Party will have a margin in the Senate of . . . one vote?

"Look, what would you rather believe: that you were snookered into rebuilding your whole party by a man much dumber and more evil than you realized, or that there are levels at play here we cannot possibly comprehend? I know which I'd prefer."

 ?? Washington Post ?? Alexandra Petri
Washington Post Alexandra Petri

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