Interesting article Billy.  I have started reviewing real clear politics 
occasionally, after seeing the articles you have presented to the RC group.

Chris 

 

 

From: BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2016 12:40 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Walter Russell Mead on the 2016 election

 

The American Interest

published in Real Clear Politics

May 24, 2016

 

 

 

The Meaning of Mr. Trump 

Walter Russell Mead

What energizes the Trump phenomenon is the power of “NO!”: people who think the 
train is about to head off a cliff want to pull the emergency cord that stops 
the train even if they don’t know what happens next.

 

 

The punditocracy whipped itself up into a a hot frenzy over the weekend about 
Mr. Trump’s recent rise in the polls against Secretary Clinton, with the RCP 
average showing the presumptive Republican nominee with a statistically 
meaningless but eye-catching lead of 0.2 percent. But there is less here than 
meets the eye. Trump is benefitting from the normal phenomenon of GOP voters 
rallying around the standard bearer now that his nomination is all but certain. 
Clinton meanwhile is still mired in the contest with Sanders. Once the 
nomination fight is over, she should also get a bump.We aren’t going to get 
into the horse race punditry here; the U.S. press burns through vast resources 
of energy and time over-reporting and over-analyzing every random twist in a 
grossly over-hyped presidential campaign season that now stretches out across 
two of every four years. The country would be much better off if both news 
writers and news readers paid less attention to the horse race and more 
attention to the events and trends that are reshaping the world—and that will 
have more impact on the next four years than the personality of the person 
elected to occupy the Oval Office. 

As far as one can say anything sensible about the race at this point, it 
appears to look like this: Clinton is the putative favorite given Obama’s 
favorable job approval ratings, the state of the economy, and demographic 
trends that don’t seem to favor the Trump campaign. But there is a non-trivial 
chance that Trump’s non-conventional attacks can derail the Clinton 
campaign—much as the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth derailed the Kerry campaign 
in 2004. 

Just as Kerry made his Vietnam service the cornerstone of his campaign (at a 
time when the shock of 9/11 still made Americans suspicious of candidates 
without very tough national security credentials), Secretary Clinton has made 
feminism the foundation of hers. The Swift Boat Veterans’ assault on Kerry’s 
war record was successful enough to undercut public confidence in the essential 
premise of his campaign. If Trump can make the charge that Clinton helped her 
husband vilify and marginalize the women who came forward to charge him with 
exploitative personal encounters, it’s just possible that her campaign could be 
holed below the waterline. 

Team Clinton will have to think hard about how to respond. Trump looks like a 
vulnerable candidate—one with so many flaws that his candidacy must inevitably 
implode once he comes under serious scrutiny. But as he showed during the 
primary campaign, Trump isn’t subject to the normal rules. Between policy 
flip-flops, lack of knowledge and experience, business woes, ill-tempered 
outbursts, and scapegoating of minority groups who are likely to vote in 
November, he presents his opponents with an embarrassment of riches: there are 
so many attractive targets for negative ads that even Lee Atwater would be hard 
pressed to decide which to hit first. 

But this apparent weakness and vulnerability conceals a strength: Trump is an 
unconventional candidate whose proposition to the electorate isn’t about 
particular policy stands, experience, credentials or even personal and 
political honesty. Trump is the purest expression of the politics of ‘NO!’ that 
I personally can recall. He’s the candidate for people who think the 
conventional wisdom of the American establishment is hopelessly out of touch 
with the real world. He’s the little boy saying that the emperor, or in this 
case, the aspiring empress, has no clothes. What energizes the Trump phenomenon 
is the very power of rejection: people who think the train is about to head off 
a cliff want to pull the emergency cord that stops the train even if they don’t 
know what happens next. To many of Trump supporters, Hillary Clinton looks like 
Nurse Ratched in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest: the enforcer of a fatally 
flawed status quo and the personification of bureaucratic power in a system 
gone rogue. 

What makes Trump so appealing to so many voters is that the establishment does 
seem unusually clueless these days. The great American post-Cold War project of 
seeking peace and security through the construction of a New World Order based 
on liberal internationalism and American power doesn’t seem to be working very 
well, and it’s not hard to conclude that neither the neoconservatives nor the 
Obama-ites really know what they are doing. When it comes to the economy, it’s 
been clear since the financial crisis of 2008 that something is badly awry and 
that the economists, so dogmatic and opinionated and so bitterly divided into 
quarreling schools, aren’t sure how the system works anymore, and have no real 
ideas about how to make the world system work to the benefit of ordinary voters 
in the United States. With the PC crowd and the Obama administration hammering 
away at transgender bathroom rights as if this was the great moral cause of our 
time, and with campus Pure Thought advocates collapsing into self parody even 
as an epidemic of drug abuse and family breakdown relentlessly corrodes the 
foundations of American social cohesion, it’s hard to believe that the 
establishment has a solid grip on the moral principles and priorities a society 
like ours needs. 

Trump appeals to all those who think that the American Establishment, the Great 
and the Good of both parties, has worked its way into a dead end of ideas that 
don’t work and values that can’t save us. He is the candidate of 
Control-Alt-Delete. His election would sweep away the smug generational 
certainties that Clinton embodies, the Boomer Progressive Synthesis that hasn’t 
solved the problems of the world or of the United States, but which 
nevertheless persists in regarding itself as the highest and only form of 
truth. 

The interest groups and power centers that surround Secretary Clinton like a 
praetorian guard—Wall Street, the upper middle class feminists, the African 
American establishment, the Davoisie, the institutional power of the great 
foundations and educational bureaucracies, Silicon Valley, Hollywood—have 
defeated their intellectual and political rivals in their spheres of interest 
and influence. Supporting her is a massive agglomeration of power, intellect, 
wealth and talent. Her candidacy is the logical climax of the Baby Boom’s march 
through the institutions of American life. Even the neoconservatives are 
enlisting in her campaign.

 

 

The American Right for all its earnest efforts has been unable to construct a 
counter establishment that can compete with the contemporary liberal behemoth. 
Libertarian nostalgia for the 1920s and 1890s, social conservative nostalgia 
for the faux-certainties of the 1950s; paleocon isolationism; white 
nationalism; ‘reformicon’ tweaks to the liberal policy agenda—none of these 
mutually hostile and contradictory sets of ideas can challenge the Boomer 
Establishment synthesis. The Clintonian center-Left won the cultural and 
intellectual battles of its time against both the hard left and the fragmented 
right. The Clinton candidacy is about inevitability, about the laws of 
historical and institutional gravity. 

Yet though the Boomer Consensus has triumphed in the world of American 
institutions and ideas, in the eyes of many Americans it has not done all that 
well in the real world. Foreign policy, financial policy, health policy, 
support of the middle class, race relations, family life, public education, 
trade policy, city and state government management, wages: what exactly has the 
Boomer Consensus accomplished in these fields? Many Americans think that the 
Consensus is a scam and a flop when it comes to actually, well, making things 
better for the average person. It has made life better, much better, for the 
upper middle class; few would dispute its accomplishments there. And Wall 
Street has every reason to pay large speaking fees and make large financial 
contributions to the champion of the orthodoxy that helped make it so rich. 

But many and possibly most Americans think that the Boomer Consensus didn’t 
work for them. They may not have much confidence in the various conservative 
and socialist alternatives to the consensus, but they believe that something 
about it is flawed, and they want it stopped dead in its tracks. This is where 
Trump comes in. His supporters aren’t united around a set of positive ideas, 
but they are united in opposition to the status quo. They believe that the 
emperor has no clothes, even if they can’t agree on a replacement wardrobe. 

This makes it easy and profitable for Trump to wage negative campaigns—against 
Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and the Republican establishment in the 
primary, against Hillary Clinton and the conventional wisdom of the center left 
in the general. It also makes it much harder for negative campaigns to hurt 
him: his appeal doesn’t stem from approval for particular policies, but from 
opposition to elements of the status quo. His supporters may not expect Mexico 
to pay for a border wall, but they believe that he doesn’t like unlimited 
illegal immigration and that he will do something about it. His supporters do 
not necessarily think he will start a trade war with China, but they don’t 
think that the conventional approach to globalization is working and they 
expect him to try something different. At the very least, they believe that he 
won’t exude serenely toxic moral smugness as he steers the country down a dead 
end road, that he will at least try to wrench the country off its current 
course. 

This makes him hard to hit. To accuse him of a business career based on flim 
flam and razzle dazzle doesn’t hurt him with people who think the economic game 
is rigged. To accuse him of sponsoring outrageous policy ideas that the experts 
unite in condemning won’t hurt him with people who have lost faith in the 
experts and the oracles of conventional wisdom. To accuse him of inconsistency 
won’t hurt him with people who think the establishment is hypocritical and 
self-serving. 

Myself, I don’t think the system is quite as corrupt as some Trump supporters 
believe or, perhaps more accurately, I lack their confidence that burning down 
the old house is the best way to build something new. But it would be equally 
wrong and perhaps more dangerous to take the view that there is nothing more 
fueling his rise than ignorance, racism and hate. The failure of the 
center-Left to transform its institutional and intellectual dominance into 
policy achievements that actually stabilize middle class life, and the failure 
of the center-Right to articulate a workable alternative have left a giant 
intellectual and political vacuum in the heart of American life. The Trump 
movement is not an answer to our problems, but the social instinct of revolt 
and rejection that powers it is a sign of social health. The tailors are frauds 
and the emperor is not in fact wearing any clothes: it is a good sign and not a 
bad sign that so many Americans are willing to say so out loud. 

Those of us who care about policy, propriety and the other bourgeois values 
without which no democratic society can long thrive need to spend less time 
wringing our hands about the shortcomings of candidate Trump and the movement 
that has brought him this far, and more time both analyzing the establishment 
failures that have brought the country to this pass, and developing a new 
vision for the American future. The one thing we know about 2016 is that 
neither of these two candidates has what it takes to repair or to renovate the 
ship of state. Clinton stands for the competent management of an unsustainable 
status quo, like Rahm Emmanuel in Chicago: a pair of safe and steady hands on 
the wheel as the ship glides slowly toward the reefs. Trump, at least so far as 
we can infer what a Trump administration would be like, stands for the venting 
of steam and the striking of satisfying poses. 

We can hope that a President Clinton’s instincts for power and 
self-preservation will make her something better than the earnest custodian of 
a failing status quo, and we can hope that a President Trump would prove 
inspired and lucky rather than bumptiously sharp-tongued. But hope is not a 
plan. The likeliest forecast is that under either candidate, the slow 
unraveling of the liberal world order and the American domestic system will 
continue and possibly accelerate. The 2020 election may take place against an 
even darker background than what we now see; if America’s intellectuals and 
institutions don’t start raising their games, 2016 could soon start to look 
like the good old days.

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  • [RC] Wa... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • RE... Chris Hahn
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