OPINION
CHARLES M.
BLOW
What Did We Learn From Trump’s Waco Rally? He’s
Stuck in the Past.
March 26,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/26/opinion/trump-waco-rally.html
Charles M.
Blow
By Charles
M. Blow
Opinion
Columnist
WACO, Texas
— In the first big rally of his 2024 presidential campaign, Donald Trump didn’t
dwell on the symbolism of speaking in Waco amid the 30th anniversary of the
deadly siege there that still serves as a right-wing cri de coeur against
federal authority.
He didn’t
have to.
This
speech, like so many of his speeches, was a mix of lies, hyperbole,
superlatives, invectives, doomsaying, puerile humor and callbacks to old
grievances — messaging that operates on multiple levels.
Some of his
followers hear a call to arms. Some hear their private thoughts given voice.
Others hear the lamentations of a valiant victim. Still others hear a wry
jokester poking his finger into the eye of the political establishment.
In
attacking Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida — a likely rival for the Republican
nomination — for perceived disloyalty, Trump invoked a former Tallahassee
mayor, Andrew Gillum, who ran against DeSantis in 2018. A year and a half
later, Gillum was found in a Miami Beach hotel room with what reports called “a
reputed male escort and suspected methamphetamine.”
But those
facts weren’t enough for Trump, who turned up the sensationalism, calling
Gillum a “crackhead,” getting a laugh from the crowd.
It’s a
standard part of Trump’s routine: Comedians aren’t bound by the truth — or the
sensitivities of race, gender and sexuality — after all. To get laughs, they’re
granted license to engage in all manner of distortion, and that’s what Trump
does.
In fact,
Trump’s entertainment quotient doesn’t get nearly as much attention and
analysis as it deserves. His supporters like him in part because of the
irreverence he brings to the political arena.
He called
Stormy Daniels “horse-face” and said that if he’d had an affair, she would “not
be the one” — a remark not only crude and sexist, but one that belies the
reality that more than a dozen women have accused him of sexual improprieties.
Remember:
Before Trump, when national politicians were of the more traditional variety, a
man commenting on a woman’s looks, even in an attempt to flatter, was rightly
off limits. A decade ago, when President Barack Obama jokingly called Kamala
Harris the “best-looking attorney general in the country,” he was so roundly
criticized that he was forced to apologize.
But when
Trump disparaged Daniels, the crowd cheered him on.
Trump is
the Andrew Dice Clay of American politics, appealing to machismo, misogyny and
mischief — a type of character that’s a constant in American culture.
Clay
himself was just a darker version of characters from 1970s pop culture, like
Danny in “Grease” and Fonzie in “Happy Days.” And they were just bubble
gum-and-giggles versions of characters played by James Dean in the 1950s.
Trump took
an American archetype and added horror, actual political power and a
potentially empire-ending ego. His humor and audacity are often part of the
narrative of the American folk hero, a status Trump has attained among his
followers.
Indeed, the
atmosphere outside of Saturday’s rally, on a beautiful spring day, felt like
tailgating before a concert.
This is
part of what makes Trump so dangerous. For some, the extreme fandom creates
community. For others, Trump worship could inspire violent fanaticism, as we
saw on Jan. 6, 2021.
It’s a
formula, and among die-hard Trump fans, it works. But, as the charm of the
formula fades, it may also prove to be Trump’s Achilles' heel. He’s stuck in a
backward-facing posture when the country is moving forward. Instead of vision,
Trump offers revision.
Trump is
still exaggerating old accomplishments, re-litigating a lost election and
marking enemies for retribution. He’s stuck in a rut.
He has an
obsession with enemies, personal, real or perceived. He needs them, otherwise
he’s a warrior without a war.
All the
while, the Republicans around the country looking for someone new, arguably led
by DeSantis, have moved on to their own war, a new war, a culture war.
It’s not
focused on them personally, but on using parental fears to further oppressive
policies. While Trump disparaged minorities on a national level — civil rights
protesters, immigrants and Muslims — today’s Republicans have started to codify
oppression on a local level.
They
provide legislative bite for Trump’s rhetorical bark. They’re what Trumpism
looks like without him, what intolerance looks like when you dress it up and
make it dance.
They’re the
vanguards of the ridiculous war on wokeness. But this isn’t Trump’s lane. It’s
not his invention. And his pride resists a full embrace of it.
Trump spoke
for about an hour and half on Saturday, but mostly saved the culture-war
rhetoric for the end, threatening an executive order to cancel funding to
schools that teach critical race theory, “transgender insanity” or “racial,
sexual or political content.”
It was a
sweeping threat, but even there he promised to do it through easily reversible
executive dictate rather than through more sturdy legislative mechanisms.
Trump had a
moment. He won an election (even if it came with Russian connections and James
Comey’s bad judgment). And for four years, the proverbial inmates ran the
asylum. But that time has passed. Trump hasn’t moved, but the ground beneath
him has shifted.
After
Trump’s speech, I went back to listen to his first speech after announcing his
candidacy in 2015. The tone and themes were strikingly similar. He hasn’t grown
much, personally or politically, since then. He’s more sure of himself and more
vulgar, but narcissism is still his engine.
Ultimately,
if his legal issues don’t do him in, his inability to grow beyond nostalgia and
negativity could.
Being the
personification of a television rerun, a horror comedy with retro reference,
isn’t a match for this moment. This is not 2016.
Charles M.
Blow joined The Times in 1994 and became an Opinion columnist in 2008. He is
also a television commentator and writes often about politics, social justice
and vulnerable communities. @CharlesMBlow • Facebook


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