Democracies
end when they are too democratic
And
right now, America is a breeding ground for tyranny.
By ANDREW SULLIVAN
May 1, 2016
As this dystopian
election campaign has unfolded, my mind keeps being tugged by a
passage in Plato’s Republic. It has unsettled — even surprised —
me from the moment I first read it in graduate school. The passage is
from the part of the dialogue where Socrates and his friends are
talking about the nature of different political systems, how they
change over time, and how one can slowly evolve into another. And
Socrates seemed pretty clear on one sobering point: that “tyranny
is probably established out of no other regime than democracy.”
What did Plato mean by that? Democracy, for him, I discovered, was a
political system of maximal freedom and equality, where every
lifestyle is allowed and public offices are filled by a lottery. And
the longer a democracy lasted, Plato argued, the more democratic it
would become. Its freedoms would multiply; its equality spread.
Deference to any sort of authority would wither; tolerance of any
kind of inequality would come under intense threat; and
multiculturalism and sexual freedom would create a city or a country
like “a many-colored cloak decorated in all hues.”
This rainbow-flag
polity, Plato argues, is, for many people, the fairest of regimes.
The freedom in that democracy has to be experienced to be believed —
with shame and privilege in particular emerging over time as
anathema. But it is inherently unstable. As the authority of elites
fades, as Establishment values cede to popular ones, views and
identities can become so magnificently diverse as to be mutually
uncomprehending. And when all the barriers to equality, formal and
informal, have been removed; when everyone is equal; when elites are
despised and full license is established to do “whatever one
wants,” you arrive at what might be called late-stage democracy.
There is no kowtowing to authority here, let alone to political
experience or expertise.
The very rich come
under attack, as inequality becomes increasingly intolerable.
Patriarchy is also dismantled: “We almost forgot to mention the
extent of the law of equality and of freedom in the relations of
women with men and men with women.” Family hierarchies are
inverted: “A father habituates himself to be like his child and
fear his sons, and a son habituates himself to be like his father and
to have no shame before or fear of his parents.” In classrooms, “as
the teacher ... is frightened of the pupils and fawns on them, so the
students make light of their teachers.” Animals are regarded as
equal to humans; the rich mingle freely with the poor in the streets
and try to blend in. The foreigner is equal to the citizen.
And it is when a
democracy has ripened as fully as this, Plato argues, that a would-be
tyrant will often seize his moment.
He is usually of the
elite but has a nature in tune with the time — given over to random
pleasures and whims, feasting on plenty of food and sex, and reveling
in the nonjudgment that is democracy’s civil religion. He makes his
move by “taking over a particularly obedient mob” and attacking
his wealthy peers as corrupt. If not stopped quickly, his appetite
for attacking the rich on behalf of the people swells further. He is
a traitor to his class — and soon, his elite enemies, shorn of
popular legitimacy, find a way to appease him or are forced to flee.
Eventually, he stands alone, promising to cut through the paralysis
of democratic incoherence. It’s as if he were offering the addled,
distracted, and self-indulgent citizens a kind of relief from
democracy’s endless choices and insecurities. He rides a backlash
to excess—“too much freedom seems to change into nothing but too
much slavery” — and offers himself as the personified answer to
the internal conflicts of the democratic mess. He pledges, above all,
to take on the increasingly despised elites. And as the people thrill
to him as a kind of solution, a democracy willingly, even
impetuously, repeals itself.
And so, as I
chitchatted over cocktails at a Washington office Christmas party in
December, and saw, looming above our heads, the pulsating, angry
televised face of Donald Trump on Fox News, I couldn’t help but
feel a little nausea permeate my stomach. And as I watched frenzied
Trump rallies on C-SPAN in the spring, and saw him lay waste to far
more qualified political peers in the debates by simply calling them
names, the nausea turned to dread. And when he seemed to condone
physical violence as a response to political disagreement, alarm
bells started to ring in my head. Plato had planted a gnawing worry
in my mind a few decades ago about the intrinsic danger of
late-democratic life. It was increasingly hard not to see in Plato’s
vision a murky reflection of our own hyperdemocratic times and in
Trump a demagogic, tyrannical character plucked directly out of one
of the first books about politics ever written.
Could it be that the
Donald has emerged from the populist circuses of pro wrestling and
New York City tabloids, via reality television and Twitter, to prove
not just Plato but also James Madison right, that democracies “have
ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention … and have in
general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in
their deaths”? Is he testing democracy’s singular weakness —
its susceptibility to the demagogue — by blasting through the
firewalls we once had in place to prevent such a person from seizing
power? Or am I overreacting?
Perhaps. The nausea
comes and goes, and there have been days when the news algorithm has
actually reassured me that “peak Trump” has arrived. But it
hasn’t gone away, and neither has Trump. In the wake of his most
recent primary triumphs, at a time when he is perilously close to
winning enough delegates to grab the Republican nomination outright,
I think we must confront this dread and be clear about what this
election has already revealed about the fragility of our way of life
and the threat late-stage democracy is beginning to pose to itself.
Plato, of course,
was not clairvoyant. His analysis of how democracy can turn into
tyranny is a complex one more keyed toward ancient societies than our
own (and contains more wrinkles and eddies than I can summarize
here). His disdain for democratic life was fueled in no small part by
the fact that a democracy had executed his mentor, Socrates. And he
would, I think, have been astonished at how American democracy has
been able to thrive with unprecedented stability over the last couple
of centuries even as it has brought more and more people into its
embrace. It remains, in my view, a miracle of constitutional
craftsmanship and cultural resilience. There is no place I would
rather live. But it is not immortal, nor should we assume it is
immune to the forces that have endangered democracy so many times in
human history.
Part of American
democracy’s stability is owed to the fact that the Founding Fathers
had read their Plato. To guard our democracy from the tyranny of the
majority and the passions of the mob, they constructed large, hefty
barriers between the popular will and the exercise of power. Voting
rights were tightly circumscribed. The president and vice-president
were not to be popularly elected but selected by an Electoral
College, whose representatives were selected by the various states,
often through state legislatures. The Senate’s structure (with two
members from every state) was designed to temper the power of the
more populous states, and its term of office (six years, compared
with two for the House) was designed to cool and restrain temporary
populist passions. The Supreme Court, picked by the president and
confirmed by the Senate, was the final bulwark against any democratic
furies that might percolate up from the House and threaten the
Constitution. This separation of powers was designed precisely to
create sturdy firewalls against democratic wildfires.
Over the centuries,
however, many of these undemocratic rules have been weakened or
abolished. The franchise has been extended far beyond propertied
white men. The presidency is now effectively elected through popular
vote, with the Electoral College almost always reflecting the
national democratic will. And these formal democratic advances were
accompanied by informal ones, as the culture of democracy slowly took
deeper root. For a very long time, only the elites of the political
parties came to select their candidates at their quadrennial
conventions, with the vote largely restricted to party officials from
the various states (and often decided in, yes, smoke-filled rooms in
large hotel suites). Beginning in the early 1900s, however, the
parties began experimenting with primaries, and after the chaos of
the 1968 Democratic convention, today’s far more democratic system
became the norm.
Direct democracy
didn’t just elect Congress and the president anymore; it expanded
the notion of who might be qualified for public office. Once,
candidates built a career through experience in elected or Cabinet
positions or as military commanders; they were effectively selected
by peer review. That elitist sorting mechanism has slowly imploded.
In 1940, Wendell Willkie, a businessman with no previous political
office, won the Republican nomination for president, pledging to keep
America out of war and boasting that his personal wealth inoculated
him against corruption: “I will be under obligation to nobody
except the people.” He lost badly to Franklin D. Roosevelt, but
nonetheless, since then, nonpolitical candidates have proliferated,
from Ross Perot and Jesse Jackson, to Steve Forbes and Herman Cain,
to this year’s crop of Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, and, of course,
Donald J. Trump. This further widening of our democracy — our
increased openness to being led by anyone; indeed, our accelerating
preference for outsiders — is now almost complete.
The barriers to the
popular will, especially when it comes to choosing our president, are
now almost nonexistent. In 2000, George W. Bush lost the popular vote
and won the election thanks to Electoral College math and, more
egregiously, to a partisan Supreme Court vote. Al Gore’s eventual
concession spared the nation a constitutional crisis, but the episode
generated widespread unease, not just among Democrats. And this year,
the delegate system established by our political parties is also
under assault. Trump has argued that the candidate with the most
votes should get the Republican nomination, regardless of the rules
in place. It now looks as if he won’t even need to win that
argument — that he’ll bank enough delegates to secure the
nomination uncontested — but he’s won it anyway. Fully half of
Americans now believe the traditional nominating system is rigged.
Many contend, of
course, that American democracy is actually in retreat, close to
being destroyed by the vastly more unequal economy of the last
quarter-century and the ability of the very rich to purchase
political influence. This is Bernie Sanders’s core critique. But
the past few presidential elections have demonstrated that, in fact,
money from the ultrarich has been mostly a dud. Barack Obama, whose
2008 campaign was propelled by small donors and empowered by the
internet, blazed the trail of the modern-day insurrectionist,
defeating the prohibitive favorite in the Democratic primary and
later his Republican opponent (both pillars of their parties’
Establishments and backed by moneyed elites). In 2012, the
fund-raising power behind Mitt Romney — avatar of the one percent —
failed to dislodge Obama from office. And in this presidential cycle,
the breakout candidates of both parties have soared without financial
support from the elites. Sanders, who is sustaining his campaign all
the way to California on the backs of small donors and large crowds,
is, to put it bluntly, a walking refutation of his own argument.
Trump, of course, is a largely self-funding billionaire — but like
Willkie, he argues that his wealth uniquely enables him to resist the
influence of the rich and their lobbyists. Those despairing over the
influence of Big Money in American politics must also explain the
swift, humiliating demise of Jeb Bush and the struggling
Establishment campaign of Hillary Clinton. The evidence suggests that
direct democracy, far from being throttled, is actually intensifying
its grip on American politics.
None of this is
necessarily cause for alarm, even though it would be giving the
Founding Fathers palpitations. The emergence of the first black
president — unimaginable before our more inclusive democracy — is
miraculous, a strengthening, rather than weakening, of the system.
The days when party machines just fixed things or rigged elections
are mercifully done with. The way in which outsider candidates, from
Obama to Trump and Sanders, have brought millions of new people into
the electoral process is an unmitigated advance. The inclusion of
previously excluded voices helps, rather than impedes, our public
deliberation. But it is precisely because of the great
accomplishments of our democracy that we should be vigilant about its
specific, unique vulnerability: its susceptibility, in stressful
times, to the appeal of a shameless demagogue.
What the 21st
century added to this picture, it’s now blindingly obvious, was
media democracy — in a truly revolutionary form. If late-stage
political democracy has taken two centuries to ripen, the media
equivalent took around two decades, swiftly erasing almost any elite
moderation or control of our democratic discourse. The process had
its origins in partisan talk radio at the end of the past century.
The rise of the internet — an event so swift and pervasive its
political effect is only now beginning to be understood — further
democratized every source of information, dramatically expanded each
outlet’s readership, and gave everyone a platform. All the old
barriers to entry — the cost of print and paper and distribution —
crumbled.
So much of this was
welcome. I relished it myself in the early aughts, starting a blog
and soon reaching as many readers, if not more, as some small
magazines do. Fusty old-media institutions, grown fat and lazy,
deserved a drubbing. The early independent blogosphere corrected
facts, exposed bias, earned scoops. And as the medium matured, and as
Facebook and Twitter took hold, everyone became a kind of blogger. In
ways no 20th-century journalist would have believed, we all now have
our own virtual newspapers on our Facebook newsfeeds and Twitter
timelines — picking stories from countless sources and creating a
peer-to-peer media almost completely free of editing or interference
by elites. This was bound to make politics more fluid. Political
organizing — calling a meeting, fomenting a rally to advance a
cause — used to be extremely laborious. Now you could bring
together a virtual mass movement with a single webpage. It would take
you a few seconds.
The web was also
uniquely capable of absorbing other forms of media, conflating genres
and categories in ways never seen before. The distinction between
politics and entertainment became fuzzier; election coverage became
even more modeled on sportscasting; your Pornhub jostled right next
to your mother’s Facebook page. The web’s algorithms all but
removed any editorial judgment, and the effect soon had cable news
abandoning even the pretense of asking “Is this relevant?” or “Do
we really need to cover this live?” in the rush toward ratings
bonanzas. In the end, all these categories were reduced to one thing:
traffic, measured far more accurately than any other medium had ever
done before.
And what mainly
fuels this is precisely what the Founders feared about democratic
culture: feeling, emotion, and narcissism, rather than reason,
empiricism, and public-spiritedness. Online debates become personal,
emotional, and irresolvable almost as soon as they begin. Godwin’s
Law — it’s only a matter of time before a comments section brings
up Hitler — is a reflection of the collapse of the reasoned
deliberation the Founders saw as indispensable to a functioning
republic.
Yes, occasional
rational points still fly back and forth, but there are dramatically
fewer elite arbiters to establish which of those points is actually
true or valid or relevant. We have lost authoritative sources for
even a common set of facts. And without such common empirical ground,
the emotional component of politics becomes inflamed and reason
retreats even further. The more emotive the candidate, the more
supporters he or she will get.
Politically, we
lucked out at first. Obama would never have been nominated for the
presidency, let alone elected, if he hadn’t harnessed the power of
the web and the charisma of his media celebrity. But he was also,
paradoxically, a very elite figure, a former state and U.S. senator,
a product of Harvard Law School, and, as it turned out, blessed with
a preternaturally rational and calm disposition. So he has masked,
temporarily, the real risks in the system that his pioneering
campaign revealed. Hence many Democrats’ frustration with him.
Those who saw in his campaign the seeds of revolutionary change, who
were drawn to him by their own messianic delusions, came to be
bitterly disappointed by his governing moderation and pragmatism.
The climate Obama
thrived in, however, was also ripe for far less restrained
opportunists. In 2008, Sarah Palin emerged as proof that an ardent
Republican, branded as an outsider, tailor-made for reality TV, proud
of her own ignorance about the world, and reaching an audience
directly through online media, could also triumph in this new era.
She was, it turned out, a John the Baptist for the true messiah of
conservative populism, waiting patiently and strategically for his
time to come.
Trump, we now know,
had been considering running for president for decades. Those who
didn’t see him coming — or kept treating him as a joke — had
not yet absorbed the precedents of Obama and Palin or the power of
the new wide-open system to change the rules of the political game.
Trump was as underrated for all of 2015 as Obama was in 2007 — and
for the same reasons. He intuitively grasped the vanishing authority
of American political and media elites, and he had long fashioned a
public persona perfectly attuned to blast past them.
Despite his immense
wealth and inherited privilege, Trump had always cultivated a common
touch. He did not hide his wealth in the late-20th century — he
flaunted it in a way that connected with the masses. He lived the
rich man’s life most working men dreamed of — endless glamour and
women, for example — without sacrificing a way of talking about the
world that would not be out of place on the construction sites he
regularly toured. His was a cult of democratic aspiration. His 1987
book, The Art of the Deal, promised its readers a path to instant
success; his appearances on “The Howard Stern Show” cemented his
appeal. His friendship with Vince McMahon offered him an early entrée
into the world of professional wrestling, with its fusion of sports
and fantasy. He was a macho media superstar.
One of the more
amazing episodes in Sarah Palin’s early political life, in fact,
bears this out. She popped up in the Anchorage Daily News as “a
commercial fisherman from Wasilla” on April 3, 1996. Palin had told
her husband she was going to Costco but had sneaked into J.C. Penney
in Anchorage to see … one Ivana Trump, who, in the wake of her
divorce, was touting her branded perfume. “We want to see Ivana,”
Palin told the paper, “because we are so desperate in Alaska for
any semblance of glamour and culture.”
Trump assiduously
cultivated this image and took to reality television as a natural.
Each week, for 14 seasons of The Apprentice, he would look someone in
the eye and tell them, “You’re fired!” The conversation most
humane bosses fear to have with an employee was something Trump
clearly relished, and the cruelty became entertainment. In
retrospect, it is clear he was training — both himself and his
viewers. If you want to understand why a figure so widely disliked
nonetheless powers toward the election as if he were approaching a
reality-TV-show finale, look no further. His television tactics, as
applied to presidential debates, wiped out rivals used to a different
game. And all our reality-TV training has conditioned us to hope
he’ll win — or at least stay in the game till the final round. In
such a shame-free media environment, the assholes often win. In the
end, you support them because they’re assholes.
In Eric Hoffer’s
classic 1951 tract, The True Believer, he sketches the dynamics of a
genuine mass movement. He was thinking of the upheavals in Europe in
the first half of the century, but the book remains sobering,
especially now. Hoffer’s core insight was to locate the source of
all truly mass movements in a collective sense of acute frustration.
Not despair, or revolt, or resignation — but frustration simmering
with rage. Mass movements, he notes (as did Tocqueville centuries
before him), rarely arise when oppression or misery is at its worst
(say, 2009); they tend to appear when the worst is behind us but the
future seems not so much better (say, 2016). It is when a recovery
finally gathers speed and some improvement is tangible but not yet
widespread that the anger begins to rise. After the suffering of
recession or unemployment, and despite hard work with stagnant or
dwindling pay, the future stretches ahead with relief just out of
reach. When those who helped create the last recession face no
consequences but renewed fabulous wealth, the anger reaches a
crescendo.
The deeper,
long-term reasons for today’s rage are not hard to find, although
many of us elites have shamefully found ourselves able to ignore
them. The jobs available to the working class no longer contain the
kind of craftsmanship or satisfaction or meaning that can take the
sting out of their low and stagnant wages. The once-familiar avenues
for socialization — the church, the union hall, the VFW — have
become less vibrant and social isolation more common. Global economic
forces have pummeled blue-collar workers more relentlessly than
almost any other segment of society, forcing them to compete against
hundreds of millions of equally skilled workers throughout the
planet. No one asked them in the 1990s if this was the future they
wanted. And the impact has been more brutal than many economists
predicted. No wonder suicide and mortality rates among the white
working poor are spiking dramatically.
“It is usually
those whose poverty is relatively recent, the ‘new poor,’ who
throb with the ferment of frustration,” Hoffer argues.
Fundamentalist religion long provided some emotional support for
those left behind (for one thing, it invites practitioners to defy
the elites as unholy), but its influence has waned as modernity has
penetrated almost everything and the great culture wars of the 1990s
and 2000s have ended in a rout. The result has been a more diverse
mainstream culture — but also, simultaneously, a subculture that is
even more alienated and despised, and ever more infuriated and
bloody-minded.
This is an age in
which a woman might succeed a black man as president, but also one in
which a member of the white working class has declining options to
make a decent living. This is a time when gay people can be married
in 50 states, even as working-class families are hanging by a thread.
It’s a period in which we have become far more aware of the
historic injustices that still haunt African-Americans and yet we
treat the desperate plight of today’s white working class as
an afterthought. And so late-stage capitalism is creating a
righteous, revolutionary anger that late-stage democracy has precious
little ability to moderate or constrain — and has actually helped
exacerbate.
For the white
working class, having had their morals roundly mocked, their religion
deemed primitive, and their economic prospects decimated, now find
their very gender and race, indeed the very way they talk about
reality, described as a kind of problem for the nation to overcome.
This is just one aspect of what Trump has masterfully signaled as
“political correctness” run amok, or what might be better
described as the newly rigid progressive passion for racial and
sexual equality of outcome, rather than the liberal aspiration to
mere equality of opportunity.
Much of the newly
energized left has come to see the white working class not as allies
but primarily as bigots, misogynists, racists, and homophobes,
thereby condemning those often at the near-bottom rung of the economy
to the bottom rung of the culture as well. A struggling white man in
the heartland is now told to “check his privilege” by students at
Ivy League colleges. Even if you agree that the privilege exists,
it’s hard not to empathize with the object of this disdain. These
working-class communities, already alienated, hear — how can they
not? — the glib and easy dismissals of “white straight men” as
the ultimate source of all our woes. They smell the condescension and
the broad generalizations about them — all of which would be
repellent if directed at racial minorities — and see themselves, in
Hoffer’s words, “disinherited and injured by an unjust order of
things.”
And so they wait,
and they steam, and they lash out. This was part of the emotional
force of the tea party: not just the advancement of racial
minorities, gays, and women but the simultaneous demonization of the
white working-class world, its culture and way of life. Obama never
intended this, but he became a symbol to many of this cultural
marginalization. The Black Lives Matter left stoked the fires still
further; so did the gay left, for whom the word magnanimity seems
unknown, even in the wake of stunning successes. And as the tea party
swept through Washington in 2010, as its representatives repeatedly
held the government budget hostage, threatened the very credit of the
U.S., and refused to hold hearings on a Supreme Court nominee, the
American political and media Establishment mostly chose to interpret
such behavior as something other than unprecedented. But Trump saw
what others didn’t, just as Hoffer noted: “The frustrated
individual and the true believer make better prognosticators than
those who have reason to want the preservation of the status quo.”
Mass movements,
Hoffer argues, are distinguished by a “facility for make-believe …
credulity, a readiness to attempt the impossible.” What, one
wonders, could be more impossible than suddenly vetting every single
visitor to the U.S. for traces of Islamic belief? What could be more
make-believe than a big, beautiful wall stretching across the entire
Mexican border, paid for by the Mexican government? What could be
more credulous than arguing that we could pay off our national debt
through a global trade war? In a conventional political party, and in
a rational political discourse, such ideas would be laughed out of
contention, their self-evident impossibility disqualifying them from
serious consideration. In the emotional fervor of a democratic mass
movement, however, these impossibilities become icons of hope,
symbols of a new way of conducting politics. Their very impossibility
is their appeal.
But the most
powerful engine for such a movement — the thing that gets it off
the ground, shapes and solidifies and entrenches it — is always the
evocation of hatred. It is, as Hoffer put it, “the most accessible
and comprehensive of all unifying elements.” And so Trump launched
his campaign by calling undocumented Mexican immigrants a population
largely of rapists and murderers. He moved on to Muslims, both at
home and abroad. He has now added to these enemies — with sly
brilliance — the Republican Establishment itself. And what makes
Trump uniquely dangerous in the history of American politics — with
far broader national appeal than, say, Huey Long or George Wallace —
is his response to all three enemies. It’s the threat of blunt
coercion and dominance.
And so after
demonizing most undocumented Mexican immigrants, he then vowed to
round up and deport all 11 million of them by force. “They have to
go” was the typically blunt phrase he used — and somehow people
didn’t immediately recognize the monstrous historical echoes. The
sheer scale of the police and military operation that this policy
would entail boggles the mind. Worse, he emphasized, after the mass
murder in San Bernardino, that even the Muslim-Americans you know
intimately may turn around and massacre you at any juncture. “There’s
something going on,” he declaimed ominously, giving legitimacy to
the most hysterical and ugly of human impulses.
To call this fascism
doesn’t do justice to fascism. Fascism had, in some measure, an
ideology and occasional coherence that Trump utterly lacks. But his
movement is clearly fascistic in its demonization of foreigners, its
hyping of a threat by a domestic minority (Muslims and Mexicans are
the new Jews), its focus on a single supreme leader of what can only
be called a cult, and its deep belief in violence and coercion in a
democracy that has heretofore relied on debate and persuasion. This
is the Weimar aspect of our current moment. Just as the English Civil
War ended with a dictatorship under Oliver Cromwell, and the French
Revolution gave us Napoleon Bonaparte, and the unstable chaos of
Russian democracy yielded to Vladimir Putin, and the most recent
burst of Egyptian democracy set the conditions for General el-Sisi’s
coup, so our paralyzed, emotional hyperdemocracy leads the stumbling,
frustrated, angry voter toward the chimerical panacea of Trump.
His response to his
third vaunted enemy, the RNC, is also laced with the threat of
violence. There will be riots in Cleveland if he doesn’t get his
way. The RNC will have “a rough time” if it doesn’t cooperate.
“Paul Ryan, I don’t know him well, but I’m sure I’m going to
get along great with him,” Trump has said. “And if I don’t?
He’s gonna have to pay a big price, okay?” The past month has
seen delegates to the Cleveland convention receiving death threats;
one of Trump’s hatchet men, Roger Stone, has already threatened to
publish the hotel rooms of delegates who refuse to vote for Trump.
And what’s notable
about Trump’s supporters is precisely what one would expect from
members of a mass movement: their intense loyalty. Trump is their
man, however inarticulate they are when explaining why. He’s tough,
he’s real, and they’ve got his back, especially when he is
attacked by all the people they have come to despise: liberal
Democrats and traditional Republicans. At rallies, whenever a
protester is hauled out, you can almost sense the rising rage of the
collective identity venting itself against a lone dissenter and
finding a catharsis of sorts in the brute force a mob can inflict on
an individual. Trump tells the crowd he’d like to punch a protester
in the face or have him carried out on a stretcher. No modern
politician who has come this close to the presidency has championed
violence in this way. It would be disqualifying if our
hyperdemocracy hadn’t already abolished disqualifications.
And while a critical
element of 20th-century fascism — its organized street violence —
is missing, you can begin to see it in embryonic form. The phalanx of
bodyguards around Trump grows daily; plainclothes bouncers in the
crowds have emerged as pseudo-cops to contain the incipient unrest
his candidacy will only continue to provoke; supporters have attacked
hecklers with sometimes stunning ferocity. Every time Trump
legitimizes potential violence by his supporters by saying it comes
from a love of country, he sows the seeds for serious civil unrest.
Trump celebrates
torture — the one true love of tyrants everywhere — not because
it allegedly produces intelligence but because it has a demonstration
effect. At his rallies he has recounted the mythical acts of one
General John J. Pershing when confronted with an alleged outbreak of
Islamist terrorism in the Philippines. Pershing, in Trump’s
telling, lines up 50 Muslim prisoners, swishes a series of bullets in
the corpses of freshly slaughtered pigs, and orders his men to put
those bullets in their rifles and kill 49 of the captured Muslim men.
He spares one captive solely so he can go back and tell his friends.
End of the terrorism problem.
In some ways, this
story contains all the elements of Trump’s core appeal. The vexing
problem of tackling jihadist terror? Torture and murder enough
terrorists and they will simply go away. The complicated issue of
undocumented workers, drawn by jobs many Americans won’t take?
Deport every single one of them and build a wall to stop the rest.
Fuck political correctness. As one of his supporters told an obtuse
reporter at a rally when asked if he supported Trump: “Hell yeah!
He’s no-bullshit. All balls. Fuck you all balls. That’s what I’m
about.” And therein lies the appeal of tyrants from the beginning
of time. Fuck you all balls. Irrationality with muscle.
The racial aspect of
this is also unmissable. When the enemy within is Mexican or Muslim,
and your ranks are extremely white, you set up a rubric for a racial
conflict. And what’s truly terrifying about Trump is that he does
not seem to shrink from such a prospect; he relishes it.
For, like all
tyrants, he is utterly lacking in self-control. Sleeping a handful of
hours a night, impulsively tweeting in the early hours, improvising
madly on subjects he knows nothing about, Trump rants and raves as he
surfs an entirely reactive media landscape. Once again, Plato had his
temperament down: A tyrant is a man “not having control of himself
[who] attempts to rule others”; a man flooded with fear and love
and passion, while having little or no ability to restrain or
moderate them; a “real slave to the greatest fawning,” a man who
“throughout his entire life ... is full of fear, overflowing with
convulsions and pains.” Sound familiar? Trump is as mercurial and
as unpredictable and as emotional as the daily Twitter stream. And we
are contemplating giving him access to the nuclear codes.
Those who believe
that Trump’s ugly, thuggish populism has no chance of ever making
it to the White House seem to me to be missing this dynamic.
Neo-fascist movements do not advance gradually by persuasion; they
first transform the terms of the debate, create a new movement based
on untrammeled emotion, take over existing institutions, and then
ruthlessly exploit events. And so current poll numbers are only
reassuring if you ignore the potential impact of sudden, external
events — an economic downturn or a terror attack in a major city in
the months before November. I have no doubt, for example, that Trump
is sincere in his desire to “cut the head off” ISIS, whatever
that can possibly mean. But it remains a fact that the interests of
ISIS and the Trump campaign are now perfectly aligned. Fear is always
the would-be tyrant’s greatest ally.
And though Trump’s
unfavorables are extraordinarily high (around 65 percent), he is
already showing signs of changing his tune, pivoting (fitfully) to
the more presidential mode he envisages deploying in the general
election. I suspect this will, to some fools on the fence, come as a
kind of relief, and may open their minds to him once more. Tyrants,
like mob bosses, know the value of a smile: Precisely because of the
fear he’s already generated, you desperately want to believe in his
new warmth. It’s part of the good-cop-bad-cop routine that will be
familiar to anyone who has studied the presidency of Vladimir Putin.
With his appeal to
his own base locked up, Trump may well also shift to more moderate
stances on social issues like abortion (he already wants to amend the
GOP platform to a less draconian position) or gay and even
transgender rights. He is consistent in his inconsistency, because,
for him, winning is what counts. He has had a real case against Ted
Cruz — that the senator has no base outside
ideological-conservative quarters and is even less likely to win a
general election. More potently, Trump has a worryingly strong
argument against Clinton herself — or “crooked Hillary,” as he
now dubs her.
His proposition is a
simple one. Remember James Carville’s core question in the 1992
election: Change versus more of the same? That sentiment once elected
Clinton’s husband; it could also elect her opponent this fall. If
you like America as it is, vote Clinton. After all, she has been a
member of the American political elite for a quarter-century.
Clinton, moreover, has shown no ability to inspire or rally anyone
but her longtime loyalists. She is lost in the new media and has
struggled to put away a 74-year-old socialist who is barely a member
of her party. Her own unfavorables are only 11 points lower than
Trump’s (far higher than Obama’s, John Kerry’s, or Al Gore’s
were at this point in the race), and the more she campaigns, the
higher her unfavorables go (including in her own party). She has a
Gore problem. The idea of welcoming her into your living room for the
next four years can seem, at times, positively masochistic.
It may be that
demographics will save us. America is no longer an overwhelmingly
white country, and Trump’s signature issue — illegal immigration
— is the source of his strength but also of his weakness.
Nonetheless, it’s worth noting how polling models have consistently
misread the breadth of his support, especially in these past few
weeks; he will likely bend over backward to include minorities in his
fall campaign; and those convinced he cannot bring a whole new swath
of white voters back into the political process should remember 2004,
when Karl Rove helped engineer anti-gay-marriage state constitutional
amendments that increased conservative voter turnout. All Trump needs
is a sliver of minority votes inspired by the new energy of his
campaign and the alleged dominance of the Obama coalition could crack
(especially without Obama). Throughout the West these past few years,
from France to Britain and Germany, the polls have kept missing the
power of right-wing insurgency.
Were Trump to win
the White House, the defenses against him would be weak. He would
likely bring a GOP majority in the House, and Republicans in the
Senate would be subjected to almighty popular fury if they stood in
his way. The 4-4 stalemate in the Supreme Court would break in
Trump’s favor. (In large part, of course, this would be due to the
GOP’s unprecedented decision to hold a vacancy open “for the
people to decide,” another massive hyperdemocratic breach in our
constitutional defenses.) And if Trump’s policies are checked by
other branches of government, how might he react? Just look at his
response to the rules of the GOP nomination process. He’s not
interested in rules. And he barely understands the Constitution. In
one revealing moment earlier this year, when asked what he would do
if the military refused to obey an illegal order to torture a
prisoner, Trump simply insisted that the man would obey: “They
won’t refuse. They’re not going to refuse, believe me.” He
later amended his remark, but it speaks volumes about his approach to
power. Dick Cheney gave illegal orders to torture prisoners and
coerced White House lawyers to cook up absurd “legal” defenses.
Trump would make Cheney’s embrace of the dark side and untrammeled
executive power look unambitious.
In his 1935 novel,
It Can’t Happen Here, Sinclair Lewis wrote a counterfactual about
what would happen if fascism as it was then spreading across Europe
were to triumph in America. It’s not a good novel, but it remains a
resonant one. The imagined American fascist leader — a senator
called Buzz Windrip — is a “Professional Common Man … But he
was the Common Man twenty-times-magnified by his oratory, so
that while the other Commoners could understand his every purpose,
which was exactly the same as their own, they saw him towering among
them, and they raised hands to him in worship.”
He “was vulgar,
almost illiterate, a public liar easily detected, and in his ‘ideas’
almost idiotic.” “ ‘I know the Press only too well,’ ”
Windrip opines at one point. “ ‘Almost all editors hide away in
spider-dens, men without thought of Family or Public Interest …
plotting how they can put over their lies, and advance their own
positions and fill their greedy pocketbooks.’ ”
He is obsessed with
the balance of trade and promises instant economic success: “ ‘I
shall not be content till this country can produce every single thing
we need … We shall have such a balance of trade as will go far to
carry out my often-criticized yet completely sound idea of from $3000
to $5000 per year for every single family.’ ” However
fantastical and empty his promises, he nonetheless mesmerizes the
party faithful at the nominating convention (held in Cleveland!):
“Something in the intensity with which Windrip looked at his
audience, looked at all of them, his glance slowly taking them in
from the highest-perched seat to the nearest, convinced them that he
was talking to each individual, directly and solely; that he wanted
to take each of them into his heart; that he was telling them the
truths, the imperious and dangerous facts, that had been hidden from
them.”
And all the elites
who stood in his way? Crippled by their own failures, demoralized by
their crumbling stature, they first mock and then cave. As one lone
journalist laments before the election (he finds himself in a
concentration camp afterward): “I’ve got to keep remembering …
that Windrip is only the lightest cork on the whirlpool. He didn’t
plot all this thing. With all the justified discontent there is
against the smart politicians and the Plush Horses of Plutocracy —
oh, if it hadn’t been one Windrip, it’d been another … We had
it coming, we Respectables.”
And, 81 years later,
many of us did. An American elite that has presided over massive and
increasing public debt, that failed to prevent 9/11, that chose a
disastrous war in the Middle East, that allowed financial markets to
nearly destroy the global economy, and that is now so bitterly
divided the Congress is effectively moot in a constitutional
democracy: “We Respectables” deserve a comeuppance. The vital and
valid lesson of the Trump phenomenon is that if the elites cannot
govern by compromise, someone outside will eventually try to govern
by popular passion and brute force.
But elites still
matter in a democracy. They matter not because they are democracy’s
enemy but because they provide the critical ingredient to save
democracy from itself. The political Establishment may be battered
and demoralized, deferential to the algorithms of the web and to the
monosyllables of a gifted demagogue, but this is not the time to give
up on America’s near-unique and stabilizing blend of democracy and
elite responsibility. The country has endured far harsher times than
the present without succumbing to rank demagoguery; it avoided the
fascism that destroyed Europe; it has channeled extraordinary
outpourings of democratic energy into constitutional order. It seems
shocking to argue that we need elites in this democratic age —
especially with vast inequalities of wealth and elite failures all
around us. But we need them precisely to protect this precious
democracy from its own destabilizing excesses.
And so those
Democrats who are gleefully predicting a Clinton landslide in
November need to both check their complacency and understand that the
Trump question really isn’t a cause for partisan Schadenfreude
anymore. It’s much more dangerous than that. Those still backing
the demagogue of the left, Bernie Sanders, might want to reflect that
their critique of Clinton’s experience and expertise — and their
facile conflation of that with corruption — is only playing into
Trump’s hands. That it will fall to Clinton to temper her party’s
ambitions will be uncomfortable to watch, since her willingness to
compromise and equivocate is precisely what many Americans find so
distrustful. And yet she may soon be all we have left to counter the
threat. She needs to grasp the lethality of her foe, moderate the
kind of identity politics that unwittingly empowers him, make an
unapologetic case that experience and moderation are not vices,
address much more directly the anxieties of the white working
class—and Democrats must listen.
More to the point,
those Republicans desperately trying to use the long-standing rules
of their own nominating process to thwart this monster deserve our
passionate support, not our disdain. This is not the moment to remind
them that they partly brought this on themselves. This is a moment to
offer solidarity, especially as the odds are increasingly stacked
against them. Ted Cruz and John Kasich face their decisive battle in
Indiana on May 3. But they need to fight on, with any tactic at hand,
all the way to the bitter end. The Republican delegates who are
trying to protect their party from the whims of an outsider demagogue
are, at this moment, doing what they ought to be doing to prevent
civil and racial unrest, an international conflict, and a
constitutional crisis. These GOP elites have every right to deploy
whatever rules or procedural roadblocks they can muster, and they
should refuse to be intimidated.
And if they fail in
Indiana or Cleveland, as they likely will, they need, quite simply,
to disown their party’s candidate. They should resist any
temptation to loyally back the nominee or to sit this election out.
They must take the fight to Trump at every opportunity, unite with
Democrats and Independents against him, and be prepared to sacrifice
one election in order to save their party and their country.
For Trump is not
just a wacky politician of the far right, or a riveting television
spectacle, or a Twitter phenom and bizarre working-class hero. He is
not just another candidate to be parsed and analyzed by TV pundits in
the same breath as all the others. In terms of our liberal democracy
and constitutional order, Trump is an extinction-level event. It’s
long past time we started treating him as such.
*This article
appears in the May 2, 2016 issue of New York Magazine.
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