GOP silence on Trump's false election claims
recalls McCarthy era
Ronald Brownstein
Analysis by
Ronald Brownstein
Updated
1515 GMT (2315 HKT) December 1, 2020
(CNN)The
silence of congressional Republican leaders as President Donald Trump's
unfounded claims of election fraud grow wilder and more venomous increasingly
resembles the party's deference to Sen. Joe McCarthy during the worst excesses
of his anti-Communist crusade in the early 1950s.
In McCarthy's
era, most of the GOP's leaders found excuses to avoid challenging conspiracy
theories that they knew to be implausible, even as evidence of their costs to
the nation steadily mounted. For years, despite their private doubts about his
charges and methods alike, the top GOP leadership -- particularly Senate
Republican leader Robert A. Taft, the Mitch McConnell of his day -- either
passively abetted or actively supported McCarthy's scattershot claims of
treason and Communist infiltration. A significant faction of Senate Republicans
didn't join with Democrats to curb McCarthy's power until the senator immolated
himself with his accusations, in highly publicized 1953 and 1954 hearings, that
the Army was riddled with Communists during the presidency of fellow Republican
Dwight Eisenhower.
In many
respects, the congressional GOP response to Trump has paralleled the party's
response to McCarthy. Whatever their private concerns about Trump's behavior or
values, the vast majority of congressional Republicans have supported Trump
since his 2017 inauguration at almost every turn, brushing aside concerns about
everything from openly racist language to his efforts to extort the government
of Ukraine to manufacture dirt on the eventual Democratic presidential nominee,
Joe Biden.
That
pattern of deference has continued since the election as Trump has raised
unfounded claims that he lost only because of massive voter fraud; as an array
of state and federal courts have rejected those claims as lacking any
supporting evidence, Trump has only heightened his allegations.
In an
interview with Fox News on Sunday, Trump broadened his claims to suggest that
the FBI and Department of Justice were part of a plot to defeat him; after
weeks of excoriating Georgia's Republican secretary of state for failing to
overturn the state's election results on his behalf, Trump this week extended
his criticism to the state's staunchly conservative Republican governor, Brian
Kemp. On Monday, Trump added a new Republican target when he fired a volley of
attacks against Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey after the state certified Biden's
victory there.
The 40 most
utterly unhinged lines from Donald Trump's first post-election
interview
The 40 most
utterly unhinged lines from Donald Trump's first post-election interview
Through it
all, as Trump's charges have grown more and more untethered and vitriolic,
Senate Majority Leader McConnell, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and
other top GOP legislators in both chambers -- not to mention the vast majority
of Republican governors -- have raised not a peep of dissent.
"For
me it's the dog that hasn't barked," conservative strategist and Trump
critic Bill Kristol says of the party's silence about the President's unfounded
fraud claims. "This is as if we've had the Army-McCarthy hearings and
everyone is just quiet. No one is rethinking anything."
It took
years for the GOP to unshackle itself from McCarthy, and even then the
separation came only after a figure as formidable as Eisenhower, a sitting
President and national hero, privately encouraged it.
As Kristol
notes, with McConnell and other GOP leaders deferring to Trump so completely --
and many in the GOP breathing a sigh of relief over the party's surprisingly
competitive performance in the House and Senate elections -- it's not clear
where a critical mass of resistance to him might develop, despite his
increasingly open attacks on basic pillars of American democracy.
"It
was easier to get beyond McCarthy than it will be to get beyond Trump,"
Kristol predicts.
If
anything, today's congressional Republicans have surrendered even more abjectly
to Trump's feverish claims than their predecessors did to McCarthy's. While
Taft always supported McCarthy in public, a defiant minority of Republicans
confronted him in ways that have been matched today mostly by the unelected
Republicans who identify as "never Trumpers."
The birth of McCarthyism
McCarthy
was first elected to the Senate from Wisconsin in 1946, part of a Republican
surge that year fueled by dissatisfaction with the transition back to a
peacetime economy after World War II. From that first campaign on, he
frequently tarred any force that stood in his way -- from liberal Wisconsin
newspapers to the Democrats nominated against him -- as sympathetic, or fully
allied, with Communists.
"This
Communist infiltration is a vital issue in America," he insisted in one
radio broadcast during that race, according to Thomas C. Reeves' comprehensive
1982 biography, "The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy."
These
allegations didn't make McCarthy unique at the time. As the Cold War began in
Europe and China fell to Mao Zedong's Communist forces, a wide array of
Republicans and conservative Democrats raised alarms about alleged Communist
infiltration through a broad range of American institutions; the 1947 hearings
by the House Un-American Activities Committee led to the film industry's
blacklist of actual and suspected Communists in Hollywood.
McCarthy
pushed himself to the head of this parade with a speech in Wheeling, West
Virginia, on February 9, 1950, in which he claimed to hold a list of 205
"active members of the Communist Party" in the State Department. At
other points, he changed the number of alleged Communists to 57, but the speech
set the pattern for the next four years of his fierce reign: sweeping and
shifting accusations, the immediate deployment of new charges anytime one was
disproved and the constant allegation that his critics were advancing (either
knowingly or unwittingly) the Communist cause.
In many
respects, McCarthy's rhetorical style prefigured Trump's. Like Trump today,
McCarthy constantly tried to fan resentment against allegedly soft and
un-American elites, what he called "bright young men who are born with
silver spoons in their mouths." Just as Trump has repeatedly encouraged
violence from his supporters, McCarthy presented himself as the
"manly" alternative to his critics: "McCarthyism," he often
declared, "is Americanism with its sleeves rolled up."
McCarthy,
like Trump, singled out reporters by name for attacks during his speeches. And,
like Trump today, McCarthy insisted that his supporters alone represented the
"real Americans." (Roy Cohn, the feral attorney who was McCarthy's
chief Senate aide and decades later a legal adviser to Trump, provided a living
link between the two men.)
Many
Republicans from the outset recognized the irresponsibility of McCarthy's
endlessly mutating accusations. Taft, the longtime GOP Senate leader, son of a
former president (William Howard Taft) and a figure so revered in the party
that he was known as "Mr. Republican," privately expressed doubts
about McCarthy early on. As author Larry Tye recounts in "Demagogue,"
his 2020 book on McCarthy, after the Wheeling speech Taft privately called the
senator "perfectly reckless" and complained he had "made
allegations which are impossible to prove" and "may be embarrassing
before we get through."
But in
public, Taft almost always defended and encouraged McCarthy. Though he later
denied it, most historians agree that early on he told McCarthy to "keep
talking and if one case doesn't work out he should proceed with another."
When Harry Truman criticized McCarthy's widening allegations in a speech to the
American Legion, Taft called the President "hysterical."
Almost from
the start, a larger group of congressional Republicans resisted McCarthy's wild
charges than have pushed back against Trump at any point in his presidency (and
certainly since the 2020 election). On June 1, 1950, first-term Sen. Margaret
Chase Smith of Maine, in a statement joined by about half a dozen other GOP
colleagues, took to the Senate floor to denounce not only McCarthy but also
others in the party who hoped to ride "to victory through the selfish
political exploitation of fear, bigotry, ignorance, and intolerance."
Even Time
magazine, a media pillar of the anti-Communist coalition, by fall 1951 put the
senator on its cover under the title "Demagogue McCarthy," according
to Reeves.
Yet the GOP
leadership remained steadfast behind McCarthy in the first years of his
rampage. During an extended Senate investigation of his initial accusations in
Wheeling against the State Department, wrote Reeves, "Republicans rallied
behind McCarthy even though most understood that his allegations were
fraudulent."
Whatever
their private doubts about his claims, Taft and other GOP leaders concluded
that McCarthyism was a political winner for the party, a belief reinforced by
the GOP's gains in both the House and Senate in the 1950 midterm elections, and
the further gains that swept the party to control of both legislative chambers
in Eisenhower's 1952 landslide. Gallup polls showed that about three-fifths of
Republican voters viewed McCarthy favorably well into early 1954.
The bill comes due
In another
parallel to Trump, congressional Republicans were deferential not only because
they considered McCarthy an ally, but also because they recognized him as a
potential threat. The journalist William S. White captured their skittish
ambivalence when he wrote, "In McCarthy, embarrassed Republican leaders
know they have got hold of a red-hot bazooka, useful in destroying the enemy
but also quite likely to blister the hands of the forces that employ it. Their
private fear is that a lethal rocket may at any moment blast out through the
wrong end of the pipe."
Just like
congressional Republicans now with Trump, GOP legislators then found themselves
following McCarthy into deeper and deeper waters of conspiracy theories. An
early indication of how far McCarthy might go came in June 1951, when he
delivered a 60,000-word attack on George Marshall, the brilliant Army chief of
staff in World War II and later secretary of state for Truman. It was in that
speech that McCarthy famously (or infamously) declared that he was unraveling
"a conspiracy ... so immense as to dwarf any previous such venture in the
history of man."
Yet even
after that unhinged attack -- the equivalent at the time, perhaps, of the
chimerical claims by Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell and other Trump attorneys in
their mid-November news conference -- McCarthy was honored with a prime
speaking slot at the GOP convention the next summer. And even Eisenhower was
intimidated enough by the senator's power to eliminate a passage from his
speech defending Marshall when he campaigned in Wisconsin during the
presidential race the next year.
Like
today's GOP with Trump, Republicans then thought they could benefit from
McCarthy's bark without feeling his bite. But the bill came due for years of
enabling McCarthy after Eisenhower took office in January 1953. Congressional
Republicans who had expediently welcomed McCarthy's attacks on Truman's
administration found themselves caught in the crossfire as the senator targeted
Eisenhower's. Throughout Eisenhower's first two years, McCarthy continued to
allege Communist infiltration in the Voice of America, the CIA and eventually
-- in the cause that ultimately doomed him -- the Army.
Even then,
GOP opposition to McCarthy coalesced only slowly. Taft's death in 1953
eliminated a critical McCarthy defender. But Republican leaders like William
Knowland of California, Taft's successor, vacillated between defending McCarthy
and trying to restrain him. And though Eisenhower consistently resisted a
full-scale public confrontation with McCarthy -- and Vice President Richard
Nixon repeatedly tried to broker peace between the two -- the breach inexorably
widened, with McCarthy more openly attacking the President and Eisenhower more
quietly supporting moves against the senator.
As
McCarthy's conduct became more indefensible, Republican Sen. Ralph Flanders of
Vermont -- a leader in what might have been called the
"Never-McCarthys" of the day -- publicly acknowledged what so few in
his party would say: "The responsibility for this thing lies squarely on
the heads of the Republicans who have been obsessed with the value of McCarthy
to the party. We are reaping what they have sown."
Parallels with Trump
Ultimately,
McCarthy was destroyed by his overreach in the Army investigation, which
snapped back at him when the Defense Department produced detailed evidence that
Cohn, his top aide, had systematically pressured the Pentagon to ensure favored
treatment for another McCarthy staffer who had been drafted into the Army.
The
national fever that McCarthy had ignited over four years earlier seemed to
break in a single cinematic moment in June 1954 when Joseph Welch, the Army's
patrician special counsel, defended yet another young man accused of Communist
sympathies by McCarthy with the immortal rejoinder, "Have you no sense of
decency, sir, at long last?"
McCarthy's
influence rapidly declined after that. That December, the Senate, which had
conducted numerous investigations of McCarthy's behavior, finally voted to
censure him. (Even then, Republicans divided exactly in half between support
and opposition of the measure.) His influence further receded when Democrats,
after picking up seats in the 1954 election, regained control of the Senate,
pushing McCarthy into the minority. Embittered, isolated and ravaged by
alcoholism, McCarthy died in April 1957.
McCarthy
didn't create the "red scare" of the early 1950s, but he magnified
and intensified it. In the same way, Trump didn't create the anxiety about
demographic, cultural and economic change that's at the core of his political
movement, but he has sharpened those fears into a powerful political weapon.
Each man stirred enormous excitement in parts of the GOP coalition --
particularly working-class voters without college degrees -- and intimidated
into silence most of the Republican elected officials who feared his divisive
impact on the party and the country.
Reeves
reports in his biography that while McCarthy was still riding high in early
1954, Walter Lippmann, the most influential newspaper columnist of his time,
wrote that the senator's goal was to establish himself as the GOP's
"supreme boss."
Wrote
Lippmann, "This is the totalitarianism of the man: his cold, calculated,
sustained and ruthless effort to make himself feared. That is why he has been
staging a series of demonstrations, each designed to show that he respects
nobody, no office, and no institution in the land, and that everyone at whom he
growls will run away."
Each of
those words could apply as well to Trump and the GOP today. The cowering
silence of McConnell and almost all other leading Republicans as Trump expands
his illusory fraud charges to a "conspiracy ... so immense" that it
encompasses the Justice Department, the FBI and Georgia's Republican governor
shows how much the outgoing President has succeeded in silencing dissent across
the party.
Some
Republicans may fear Trump; others may find his fraud accusations a useful tool
for weakening Biden or justifying a new wave of voter suppression measures. But
whatever their motivation for enabling Trump's baseless and corrosive claims,
Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy and the vast majority of other Republican
legislators are likely consigning themselves to the same withering verdict that
history has applied to the party predecessors who found their own reasons not
to object as Joe McCarthy tore for years at the nation's deepest values.
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