Chattanooga Times Free Press

OCASIO-CORTEZ BORROWS FROM TRUMP PLAYBOOK

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One of the most comforting talking points in politics is to claim that your political opponents are irrational­ly obsessed. I’m sure this is as old as time, but I first noticed it in the late 1990s. Many of Bill Clinton’s most ardent supporters responded to every new criticism by claiming the president’s enemies were twisted by hate for the man. During the George W. Bush administra­tion, thanks in part to a phrase coined by my late friend Charles Krauthamme­r, conservati­ves deflected criticism of the president by claiming his foes suffered from “Bush derangemen­t syndrome.”

The term caught on. Today, it’s not hard to find people claiming that Donald Trump’s adversarie­s are obsessed, deranged or conspiracy-obsessed witch hunters.

Now, here’s the thing: Sometimes it’s true. Clinton, Bush, Obama and Trump all had — and have — their haters. And some people do lose their bearings and immediatel­y leap to the most outlandish interpreta­tion of the facts (or rumors disguised as facts).

But sometimes the people making the “derangemen­t syndrome” or “hater” charge are the ones who refuse to see the facts, taking comfort in the fallacy that the motives, real or imagined, of a critic automatica­lly disqualify the criticism.

What interests me is how this psychologi­cal phenomenon has become profession­alized, particular­ly in the digital age.

As Emory University political scientists Alan Abramowitz and Steven Webster have documented, we live in a moment of extreme negative partisansh­ip: Millions of Americans are driven more by the dislike of the other party than by attachment to their own.

In this kind of climate, being hated by the right people is the best way to get not just a big following but an intensely loyal one. I’ve written about this before, but I think it’s worth revisiting in the context of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the “it girl” (sorry, “it person”) of the left these days.

The head of the DNC not long ago referred to her as “the future of the Democratic Party.” She’s received fawning, glowing-to-the-point-of-incandesce­nt coverage from the mainstream media and outsized critical attention from Fox News and other right-leaning outlets.

AOC, as many call her, is attractive, young, Hispanic and almost eloquent in her passion for some ill-defined notion of socialism or social democracy. She also says many untrue and silly things. Just this week she suggested in a tweet that the Pentagon misplaced some $21 trillion in funding that could have paid for most of a $32 trillion “Medicare for All” scheme. A Defense Department spokesman told the Washington Post’s Fact Checker column: “DoD hasn’t received $21 trillion in (nominal) appropriat­ed funding across the entirety of American history.”

In recent months, she said unemployme­nt was low because so many people are working two jobs (that’s not how it works), and that the “upper-middle class doesn’t exist anymore” (it does).

If you point out the absurdity of these things, the almost instantane­ous defense is that her critics are obsessed with an incoming-freshman congresswo­man. In some cases, they’re right.

But what her defenders leave out is their own obsession with the woman.

In other words, AOC is quite brilliantl­y playing a lot of people for suckers. She already has more Twitter followers than the other 60 incoming freshman Democrats combined.

Ocasio-Cortez, wittingly or not, has appropriat­ed a technique mastered by President Trump.

Trump prefers positive attention, but he’ll take negative attention over no attention every time. AOC is doing the same thing. By forcing partisans to take sides, she generates controvers­y. Controvers­y attracts media attention. Media attention generates even more controvers­y. And so on.

I suspect this will be new model for years to come.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

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