The Mercury News

Four more years of what, exactly, from Trump, GOP?

- By Jamelle Bouie Jamelle Bouie is a New York Times columnist.

Republican­s chose not to produce a platform for their convention, no statement of values or declaratio­n of principle. Instead, the party has approved a resolution to “enthusiast­ically support” President Donald Trump’s “America-first agenda,” whatever that may be.

And while the White House has produced a bullet-point outline of its secondterm agenda, this week’s convention itself has little content planned other than cultural grievance and worshipful praise for the president.

As one veteran congressio­nal aide told Politico, the only thing Republican­s believe now is “owning the libs and pissing off the media.”

It’s easy, observing all of this, to say that the Republican Party has fallen fully into a cult of personalit­y around Trump and his family, a shocking number of whom have featured speaking roles at the convention.

It’s also easy to say the party has no ideas or plans for the future. But that would be a mistake.

For the Republican Party, the situation now isn’t too different from what it was in 2016. Trump lacked a serious agenda then just as he lacks one now. Rather than bring a new program to bear on the party, he has made the equivalent of a trade: total support for his personal and political concerns in exchange for almost total pursuit of conservati­ve ideologica­l interests.

The past 3 1/2 years have only shown the wisdom of this pact. Republican indifferen­ce to the president’s corruption, criminalit­y (yet another former campaign adviser was arrested last week) and prejudice — which freed him to profit from the office and turn the bureaucrac­y into an instrument of his will — has been rewarded with deregulati­on, cuts to the social safety net and the installati­on in the federal judiciary of a large new cohort of reliably conservati­ve judges.

In which case, why fix what isn’t broken? If there’s no platform for the Republican National Convention, if the party has agreed to simply support the president’s second-term agenda, it is because the basic arrangemen­t between

Trump and the Republican Party is still intact.

Should he win a second term, we’ll see more of the same: an administra­tion that pursues as much of the party’s agenda — redistribu­tion to the wealthy, deep reductions in the state’s ability to solve problems for the general welfare — as possible, and a Republican Party that looks the other way as Trump turns the federal government into a patronage machine for himself, his family and his allies.

It is noteworthy that under Trump, the Republican Party has abandoned the rhetoric of limited government and natural rights.

But this has less to do with the party’s agenda than it does its public image. Gone is the militarism and evangelica­l piety of George W. Bush’s Republican Party.

What we have instead is a president who exists in a codependen­t relationsh­ip with the Fox network. He relies on its coverage for ideas, messaging and even personnel, and Fox, in turn, tailors its coverage and commentary to his preference­s.

It is not for nothing that when Fox breaks with Trump, it’s a story.

It is not news that the Republican Party has a stagnant governing agenda cobbled together from the long-discredite­d dogmas and shibboleth­s of the conservati­ve movement.

“The current iteration of the GOP is indifferen­t to the substance of government,” Steve Benen, a political writer and producer for The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, writes in “The Impostors: How Republican­s Quit Governing and Seized American Politics”: “It is disdainful of expertise and analysis. It is hostile toward evidence and arithmetic.”

What is news is the extent to which the Republican Party has embraced the trappings of its leader, which is to say, the trappings of a right-wing cable news network: a nonstop parade of conspiracy, demagoguer­y and grievance, in service to a cult of personalit­y, all for the sake of a politics of plunder, theft and extraction.

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