That's the question.
Maybe a naive one.
Because up to now, they've been shoulder-to-shoulder, rock solid behind Donald Trump. Despite his continual lies, patent unfitness, vindictive tweets, unpresidential pettiness, coddling of dictators, snubbing of friends, facilitation of racial hate, condescension to minorities, slurring of immigrants....
Well, you get it.
Or you don't.
They sure don't.
Though some seem to think now they will, or might.
I've just been reading the Monday opinion page of the New York Times, where David Leonhardt and Charles M. Blow were in rare unison, almost stereo: this, this is the moment for the scales to fall from GOP eyes, for them to realize who they've been in bed with, and to bolt out with a cry.
"President Trump must go and you—only you—have the power to make it happen," Leonhardt writes, before appealing directly to individual Republican senators to break from the herd and thus redeem themselves from eternal damnation.
"The Republicans in Congress, in the House but particularly in the Senate," writes Blow. "On which side of patriotism will history record them?"
I'm of two minds.
My gut tells me to curl a lip in unrestrained cynicism. "How cute! They actually think that this gang of cowards living in a fear-stoked phantasm for years will suddenly grow spines just because Donald Trump got caught dead-to-rights trading his country's best interest—a militarily robust Ukraine—for petty political advantage."
In what world does that happen? Do politicians risk alienating their base and getting kicked out of office?
I suppose it could happen. And I sincerely believe if one defected half of them would. But fear is a task master. As is the desire to keep your job.
It does sometimes happen.
Funny. I like my job, but I have been willing to quit it, on several occasions. and once took the trouble of expressing my displeasure over a turn of events by finding a new, albeit lower paying job, writing a letter of resignation, and quitting. Another time I threatened to. Because if you have no standards, if you are willing to accept anything, well, then you end up doing just that. Accepting anything. Which explains the Republicans and their president. I can honestly say that I'd be burned at the stake before I'd act the way Mitch McConnell acts. Or Kevin McCarthy. How those men look in the mirror, or hug their children, is a mystery to me. They must live in a bubble of cowardice, delusion and collaboration.
Republicans usually only find their conscience when it's too late. There was former senator Jeff Flake in the Washington Post, urging Congressmen to a courage he toyed with displaying before his popularity tanked.
"My fellow Republicans, it is time to risk your careers in favor of your principles," he writes, forgetting that he is Exhibit A in the case for staying mum.
Yet I can't dismiss the hope entirely. While I don't feel capable of blowing on the faint spark, I can't mock those who do. It's hard to imagine our country sliding worse and worse toward despotism. Difficult to write off anyone, even a Republican, as immune to the prick of conscience. As beyond redemption. That might be part of what allows Trump to survive up to this point. People just can't quite believe he's happening. Not to compare the two, but that's also how the Holocaust occurred. People just couldn't believe what was happening, not until it was too late.
So no, I don't think we're going to get anything near the end of "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," where Sen. Joseph Paine, the corrupt politician played by Claude Rains, tries to shoot himself, and instead confesses to his schemes. Only in a Frank Capra movie. And we are not living in a Frank Capra movie.
So no, I don't think we're going to get anything near the end of "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," where Sen. Joseph Paine, the corrupt politician played by Claude Rains, tries to shoot himself, and instead confesses to his schemes. Only in a Frank Capra movie. And we are not living in a Frank Capra movie.
This is totally off topic, but the photo shows the name on the Opera House, except those fools used a 'V' instead of a 'U' in 'BUILDING'.
ReplyDeleteThe Art Institute has that & so does Bulgari.
I've never understood that idiocy & never will!
Why do you think the wubbleyou was invented?
DeleteVat are yov complaining abovt ?
DeleteClark -- I believe they're taking after the ancient Roman custom of using "V" for "U" in inscriptions, carvings, etc. Don't ask me why the Romans did that, or why anyone today would want to copy it.
DeleteI was always told that they chiseled the straight lines of a V" because it was easier to carve into stone than the curved line of a "U"...a theory that always made total sense to me, even as a young kid who asked the very same question. Made total sense to me. Still does. So it's probably not true.
DeleteThis is kinda it in a nutshell: https://www.quora.com/Why-is-it-spelt-V-instead-of-U-on-MIT-building-10
DeleteBut that doesn't work if you look at B, D and G. All curvy enough to give other chislers a tough time.
DeleteIt should be a “prick of conscience”, not a “prick of conscious”. But reconsidering the current situation, the latter could also be correct. It’s fruitless to expect either to be found among the abundance of pricks available to today’s TV/internet generation of Republicans. Instead, it will be practicality that takes hold, as they realize it is in their best interest to end this nightmare sooner rather than later, so they can get on with rebuilding.
ReplyDeleteI agree, there certainly are an “abundance of pricks” in the Republican Party :)
DeleteThe idea of Congress being the ultimate civilian service to the Republic is as outmoded as the bustle. Many obviously desire big paychecks from industries they favor in the Capitol chambers. Others may do it for the non-monetary honors and eventually bring dishonor on themselves for partisan fidelity. Wouldn't we have a better legislature if money were distanced, if not removed from the equation? Longer waiting periods before taking lobbying positions and shorter election cycles with government funding and no big money Pacs, what should be called "Fake Donors". Senators and Representatives spend too much of their time raising campaign funds, time that should be spent on the issues. Money corrupts. Big Money corrupts big time. That's why bribery of public officials is a crime. That conservative judges have legalized it for elections doesn't make it an asset for the nation. Your need to write today's post is part of the proof for my assertion.
ReplyDeleteIMO the major politician most like Trump was Joe McCarthy. They were equals in ignorance, crudeness, boorishness, appeal to "deplorables," and readiness to insult and sneer. They also had Roy Cohn in common.
ReplyDeleteBut McCarthy was brought down because 1) after Eisenhower was elected, he started attacking the Republican administration, and 2) he made a fool of himself on TV doing so. That led the other Republican senators, who up to then had been terrified of him, to find their spines and censure him.
I just don't see that happening with Trump. For one thing, he makes a fool of himself at least once a day and no one seems to care, and for another, he is the Republican administration.
A year later, in the waning days of the Plague Year (2020--AKA the Year From Hell), we can readily see how he's even worse than that. He's more like George Wallace--a George Wallace who's channeling the ghost of Joe McCarthy.
DeleteI’d like to have Trump’s DNA tested to see if he is actually part reptile. I don’t think that’s in the Constitution now, but it should be.
ReplyDelete