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Notes -
Richard Hanania: Kakistocracy as a Natural Result of Populism
Hanania has written about Hating Modern Conservatism While Voting Republican, in the past, but it appears he's close to buyer's remorse (end section of this article). We've had previous discussions about how reality-based Trump's policies are, and Hanania makes a fairly good argument that - except for political loyalty - reality isn't a concern, and that this isn't just true of Trumpism, it's an inherent flaw of populism, in general:
The "Trump's tariff agenda is an attempt to create a new Bretton Woods-like system" theory works well enough for me to think it can be judged against reality (specifically, if negotiations with allies for lower rates occur and the administration lays out a financial mechanism for reconciling export-friendly exchange rates and reserve-currency status, that would be strong evidence of a coherent, reality-responsive plan), but perhaps the Trump administration will just continue to tariff manufacturing inputs while claiming to be protecting manufacturing...
This is an even deeper issue than just Trump. Any leader be it government or business must be regularly exposed to views and information that upset them and they disagree with so they can maintain a hold on reality. And Trump has captured the conservative party and media so tightly that they essentially function as echo chambers for him.
In the first administration he had to deal with the regular Republicans who were hesitant to yield to his nonsense under the worry that he would be a fad. He lost the popular vote and didn't have a full grasp on the media yet. Mike Pence's refusal to play along with the fake electors is a perfect example of this.
But this isn't the first admin, you do not survive in a 2nd Trump government if you confront him too much. And Fox News, Trump's favorite source might as well be Trump News now. Trump will say something out there and unexpected and instead of being distracted with a new shiny toy like before, he gets reinforcement. His obsession with Canada as a state is being rewarded in his eyes when fox news tells him about Maple MAGA and how much the Canadians totally love his ideas. They'll run stories with Russian envoys saying how he prevented WW3 (No seriously, they did that), heaping lots of over the top praise on him.
He lives in a world that says everything he does is so amazing and so smart and all the people love him for it. Even the former Trump critics like Vance realized this, the Republican party is the party of Trump right now. It also makes me wonder where the GOP can go when Trump finally kicks the bucket, a lot of candidates who try to emulate the man aren't doing well electorally. The electoral magic exists in Trump himself, not an idealogy.
Trump's genius is in combining working-class appeal with generally moderate politics in issues other than immigration and tariffs. But his biggest fans have a psychology inherently opposed to moderation and compromise. For instance, Trump said "My Administration will be great for women and their reproductive rights." The mini-Trumps would never say that. Even if they don't personally care much for "unborn children," giving their "enemies" even symbolic concessions is "cuckoldry" - totally opposed to their worldview.
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