By Conrad Black
The renomination of Donald Trump makes him only the second president who could win nonconsecutive terms. This induces me to return to my annual attempt to explain to Canadian Trump-haters the sources of the present stark division in American politics. In 2015, Donald Trump was almost the only prominent American who detected the level of discontent in the lower half of American income earners. Donald Trump had been polling comprehensively across the United States for years. He saw the political implications of these figures and concluded that the bipartisan consensus in Washington was failing a steadily larger number of Americans.
His public personality was of the Leo Durocher and Cassius Clay genre of tough and brash speaking and frequent exaggerations, in the manner of New York developers. To many, it was a caricature of the ugly American: boastful, bellicose and a braggart. This is at considerable variance with his charming and endlessly entertaining private personality, but it does appeal to a great many Americans who are aggressively annoyed about their condition. Americans were largely sympathetic to Trump’s critique of post-Reagan American politics: the federal government was composed entirely of Democrats in an entirely Democratic city where Democrats and Republicans who were almost indistinguishable from Democrats in policy terms politely exchanged incumbency as the country steadily drifted left, but with sweetheart arrangements for Wall Street, Hollywood and Silicon Valley. So comfortable and complacent were the ruling elites, they had no concept of their own vulnerability. In eight consecutive presidential terms, from 1981 to 2013, one member or other of the Bush or Clinton families was president, vice-president or secretary of state. The nation’s highest offices were being handed back and forth between two families that rose to high office because George H.W. Bush was rewarded by Ronald Reagan for losing the race for the Republican nomination in 1980, and because Bush allowed the charlatan Ross Perot to hive off 20 million Republican votes in 1992, elevating the Clintons.
First published in the National Post
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One Response
Superb summary of rough and tumble brash hash of careening American politics.
WC Fields and Groucho Marx would be proud, and J Edgar Hoover astonished at what his political progeny hath wrought, a veritable tragicomedy of errors.
Tocqueville is murmuring, “I saw it coming in this land of the knave and noble brave.”