Dayton Daily News

Faith in Deep State theory now a major dividing line

- Jonah Goldberg He writes for the National Review.

During the so-called McCarthy era, a single question cut across all partisan and philosophi­cal lines: Were you on Sen. Joe McCarthy’s side or not? McCarthy’s conspirato­rial, bullying, blunderbus­s anti-communism and “red-baiting” was either defensible or it wasn’t.

Remarkably, for many on the right, the question of whether you were “with” McCarthy almost completely crowded out the question of whether or not you were right wing or left wing, Democrat or Republican, or even where you stood on communism itself. The pressing issue was whether McCarthy went too far in his accusation­s of vast communist conspiraci­es within the government.

In the Trump era, the passions are large, but the cause seems terribly small by comparison. Faith in conspiraci­es and the people who peddle them are once again a major dividing line, but the conspiraci­es themselves lend themselves to the conclusion that history is repeating itself as farce.

We are told that the Deep State is yet another vast conspiracy lurking like a fifth column within the highest reaches of the government, dedicated to ... something. Not to a foreign power. Not to some large cause. But to itself. The president insists the Deep State unleashed “spies” to infiltrate his campaign in order to ... fill-in-the-blank. .

The “spy” in question was a man who had a couple conversati­ons with men — Carter Page and George Papadopoul­os — who expressed an eagerness to work with a foreign power, Russia. A year ago, the Trump administra­tion insisted, quite persuasive­ly, that these would-be Russian stooges were little better than coffee boys and hangers-on.

It is entirely plausible that the FBI cut too many corners in its investigat­ions into Page, Papadopoul­os and others in Trump’s orbit. But that concession is not enough for the president and his partisans. One must subscribe to the idea that there is a vast and pernicious Hydra-like entity within the government to tear down the president.

Like the ugly American who thinks if he just shouts louder the foreigner will understand English, they insist the threat is unpreceden­ted in American history. One of the president’s most loyal idolaters, Sebastian Gorka, insists that the possibly inappropri­ate use of a FISA warrant to investigat­e Page and Papadopoul­os is “100 times worse” than the crimes of the British crown that warranted the American Revolution.

The McCarthy era had similar exaggerati­ons, but they were built on a far more solid foundation. There were indeed figurative witch hunts back then, but there were also witches — witches who gave the Soviet Union nuclear secrets and warlocks who swore allegiance to a foreign power and the cause of overthrowi­ng the U.S. government. Today the larger cause is simply Donald Trump, a victim-saint-martyr in need of a large cause arrayed against him to justify his excesses.

To question Trump’s theories of the Deep State is a form of disloyalty to Trump and, for some, that snuffs out all other meaningful distinctio­ns. So according to many Trump water-carriers, Rep. Trey Gowdy is not just a Democrat in Republican mufti but an accomplice of the Deep State, all because he defended the FBI’s investigat­ion of Page and Papadopoul­os.

The “McCarthy era” was pretty short, lasting four years, if that. But that’s the thing about eras — they don’t have a precise definition. We use the term to describe periods that feel at odds with what came before them and, one hopes, what comes after.

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