Well, everyone, any news since my last column? Seriously, our politics have fallen into chaos so quickly, and there will be readers who will ask me if I take back any of what I wrote in βA Defense of Donald Trump.β I do not. I stand by my points in that piece and remain unapologetic.
It would be very easy for me to restate the case for Donald Trump even in light of the leaked audio, nasty language, and current accusations. Very easy. In fact, I made that case in a previous draft of this column. But where would that get us? The people who already hate Trump, who think all of us Trump-voters βdeplorablesβ as a matter of course, will certainly not change their minds because of another column arguing the same thing as my last one. But I have already argued the case for the Defense, and thereβs no need for me to reopen it. Rather, let us examine some of the major issues of this election that mean something to the future of the Republicβto wit, weβve got bigger fish to fry.
Let me state first of all: Hillary Clintonβs chances of winning the presidency are looking exceptionally good. If you wanted that admission, youβve got it. The people, Democrats and Republicans, who are declaring this election over, however, are going a bit too fast, in my opinion. It ainβt over till itβs over, and the result of this election may depend on the power of coalitions. Now, if I were gambling here, I would certainly place my bets on Clintonβs victory on Nov. 8. As overrated as I find their significance or relevance, one cannot deny that Trumpβs recent scandals and comments have overshadowed a fine debate performance and sent him far behind in the polls, scrambling for support. Even more troubling, the Republican Partyβs mass exodus away from Trump has left the candidate looking more like an independent than a partisan. Admittedly, Trump has never really been a partisan, but the point is that his campaign has become far more identifiably akin to an independent runβone thinks of Ross Perot or, before him, John Andersonβthan to that of a Republican outsider like Barry Goldwater or Pat Buchanan. Still, to return to the gambling metaphor, we must remember that, as they say, crazier things do happen. I, for one, could have never predicted the British vote in favor of Brexitβunpredicted by any pollster or gamblerβwhich was, as Iβve argued before, the greatest conservative victory since the fall of the Soviet Union. Let us not forget Talebβs βblack swanβ theory: that wildly unexpected events, considered extreme outliers with no possibility of occurring, do happen, more often than we expect, that we can rarely predict them scientifically or statistically (e.g., with polls), and that we always tend to rationalize it after the fact but never before it (of course). None of this is to indicate that I think a Trump victory will, in fact, take place. As of this moment, I donβtβbut letβs not have any foolish notions about this raceβs already being over. The only poll that matters, remember, is Election Day.
Clintonβs wonderful luck in this election continued with the first βWikileaksβ release of campaign emails on the same day that The Washington Post broke that first audiotape with Trump and Billy Bush. Really, it is remarkably fortuitous for her, isnβt it? What astounds me is that the leaked material is receiving such limited news coverage. Clintonβs dealings with Wall Street and major corporations, the secret connections between her campaign and the news media, and nasty remarks by a top aide about Catholics. Yet people are fascinated by Trump and his peccadillos, and so the corruption of the Clinton campaign goes flying by. Itβs not all that surprisingβwe cannot help being interested in the wild and the outlandish (and Trump is, more than anything, wild and outlandish)βbut it shows how far weβve fallen. Clintonβs strategy of parading the other candidateβs sins and thereby masking her own is marvelously effective, especially when Trumpβs sins are ultimately less relevant to but more colorful in the election at hand. Who except the political guru is hearing about the leaked emails? Certainly not John Q. Voter, whose ears are inundated with, and probably sick of, breaking news about Trumpβs past solecisms. Yet the former are probably more relevant to policy and action in the White House than the latter.
We are now being told, especially in light of Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and many other prominent Republicansβ move away from Trump because of the comments and the accusations, that the Republican Party is in shambles, ruined, will never win again, has no hope, will have to change or die, ad infinitum, ad nauseam. Now, I know it was before I was born, but I remember hearing in my studies similar claims about a political partyβs future. Ah, yes, the 1972 presidential election, in which George McGovernβs landslide loss indicated to commentators that the Democratic Party was in shambles, ruined, would never win again, had no hope, would have to change or dieβet cetera, et cetera. The Democrats, of course, won the presidency four years later. Sure, itβs possible that the Republican Party could split up, but I donβt think itβs going to happenβI donβt think so at all. Our two-party system, remember, is amazingly resilient, and whether Trump wins or not, I do not think either option will destroy that two-party system.
Rather, the Republican Party will exist as long as the conservative impulse exists in even a few of usβthe impulse of love of family, neighbor, and country, of enterprise and ingenuity, of hard work and great achievement, of traditional virtue and respect for western civilization. For such do we hope. There are no lost causes, T.S. Eliot tells us, because there are no gained causesβwe fight the same battles from age to age. I make no claims for clairvoyance, but I can say one thing: whatever happens on Nov. 8, boys and girls, the Republic will endure.
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