The Mitchell Report. Garrett Mitchell. Washington, D.C. Timely observation, commentary and analysis of cutting edge issues in American politics and public policy.
Memento, homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris.
Dear Folks —
At the conclusion of this TMR, you will find a provocative and thoughtful essay from the New Yorker’s David Remnick — “A Reckoning with Women Awaits Donald Trump” — which I read earlier today, and which prompts these thoughts at the outset of Lent and on the occasion of Valentine’s Day.
Each time we see another reasoned pronouncement about the moment when Donald J. Trump might finally pay the piper, I am reminded of just how many earlier assurances have missed the mark— the slandering of Mexicans in his announcement speech, quickly moving on to the wholesale derogation of Muslims, then John McCain, then frontal attacks on the country’s intelligence agencies and the FBI, and his infamous declaration that the fake news media is the enemy of the American people. And every week, every tweet, and every new revelation seems to take us closer to the denouement— paying hush money to porn stars, harboring domestic abusers on the White House staff, dangling his chief of staff on a very thin and very public string from the Truman balcony, and much, much more.
Seems to. But hasn’t yet.
Nevertheless, we wait and we hope. We keep thinking that Americans have a moral code, which when tested beyond its tensile strength by this barbarian at the White House gate, will lead to Donald Trump’s exit.
But perhaps what he learned in all those years of stiffing major financial institutions is that if your loan with the bank is big enough and you default, the bank has a problem, not you. Just as he demonstrated to thousands of small business owners and artisans that offering twenty cents on the dollar — take it or leave it — or sue me — payment will put a lot of money in your pocket. Remember this is a man who was engaged in 4,095 law suits during a 30-year stretch of his business career (https://www.usatoday.com/pages/interactives/trump-lawsuits/), which means that he averaged more than 2.5 law suits per week for three decades.
Think about that. Every week for thirty years. And you ask whether this litigious, salacious, septuagenarian will turn over a new leaf?
He learned important things about human behavior in all those years from his two mentors Fred Trump and Roy Cohn, both masters of the dark arts.— that power can be wielded by the relentless exercise of audacity, calumny, chicanery, fraud, humiliation, immodesty, intimidation, malevolence, and other niceties. And he took those behaviors from gambling casinos to the Oval Office.
And, yet, he’s still standing. Still a billionaire. Still unpunished. And still surrounded by an army of sycophants for whom the allure of proximity to power at the highest levels is both an aphrodisiac and an immedicable condition. Whether it will finally entrap him is the question du jour? Followed by when? And, finally, for which of his high crimes and misdemeanors.
Here are David Remnick’s observations on the possibility that women may be the undoing of the noted pussy-grabber. Whether he has it right is questionable. But if he does, we are in the realm of poetic justice.
Even Steve Bannon recognizes that female voters will punish Donald Trump for his cavalier dismissal of assault and abuse allegations.
Photograph by Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty
Donald Trump is the least mysterious figure in the history of the American Presidency. His infantile character, duplicity, cold-heartedness, and self-dealing greed are evident not merely to the majority of the poll-answering electorate but, sooner or later, to those who make the decision to work at his side. This is manifest even in Trump’s favored medium, reality television. Recently, fans of “Celebrity Big Brother” witnessed Omarosa Manigault-Newman, the unforgettably forgettable former White House aide in charge of nothing at all, tearfully confessing her global despair. “It’s not going to be O.K.,” she said.
No kidding. Sooner or later, Trump’s satraps and lieutenants, present and former, come to betray a vivid sense of just how imperilled and imperilling this Presidency is. In their sotto-voce remarks to the White House press, these aides seem to compete in their synonyms for the President’s modesty of intelligence (“moron,” “idiot,” “fool”); his colossal narcissism; his lack of human empathy. They admit to reporters how little he studies the basics of domestic policy and national security; how partial he is to autocrats like himself; how indifferent he is to allies. They are shocked, they proclaim, absolutely shocked. In the past few days, it has been Trump’s misogyny, his heedless attitude toward women and issues of harassment and abuse, that has shocked them most. And those who know him best recognize the political consequences ahead.
Last month, the journalist Joshua Green watched the Golden Globes ceremony on television with Steve Bannon, a Trump ideologist and self-described nationalist “revolutionary.” Green’s book on Bannon, “Devil’s Bargain,” was among the best on the 2016 campaign, and now Green was in search of material for a preface to his forthcoming paperback edition. He got it. As the two men watched the awards show—the women dressed in black to commemorate the #MeToo movement and the downfall of the likes of Harvey Weinstein; Oprah Winfrey winning such sustained applause for her speech (“Their time is up!”) that she was soon fielding questions about a Presidential run—Bannon could not fail to see it in terms of Trump’s political future.
“It’s a Cromwell moment!” Bannon said. “It’s even more powerful than populism. It’s deeper. It’s primal. It’s elemental. The long black dresses and all that—this is the Puritans. It’s anti-patriarchy.”
Bannon, whose history is hardly one of feminism, was stunned by the fervor of what he was seeing, and, charmingly, he spoke of it not as justice but as a threat of wholesale emasculation. “If you rolled out a guillotine, they’d chop off every set of balls in the room,” he said.
And yet Bannon, who is partial to grand pronouncements, acknowledged the political stakes, not least for the President. “You watch. The time has come,” he said. “Women are gonna take charge of society. And they couldn’t juxtapose a better villain than Trump. He is the patriarch. This is a definitional moment in the culture. It’ll never be the same going forward . . . The anti-patriarchy movement is going to undo ten thousand years of recorded history.”
Bannon, who has failed to return to Trump’s good graces since his ouster from the White House, last August, has relinquished the rhetoric of personal loyalty. Green told Jake Tapper on CNN that Bannon told him, “I’m sick of being a wet nurse for a seventy-one-year-old.”
Green’s publisher wisely released Bannon’s remarks because they meshed so well with Trump’s own behavior following the downfall last week of two of his White House aides. When Rob Porter, the White House staff secretary, left his job after charges, and evidence, of abuse from his two ex-wives became public, the President showed not a trace of sympathy for anyone but Porter himself. This was striking. One former wife had obtained a protective order against Porter; the other presented the F.B.I. with a photograph of herself with a black eye, the result, she said, of a beating Porter delivered her while on vacation in Italy. And yet Trump went to great lengths, in a public statement, to sympathize with the “tough time” that Porter was enduring, to praise the “very good job” he had done, and to express confidence that he had a “wonderful career” ahead of him. As for Porter’s ex-wives, Colbie Holderness and Jennie Willoughby . . . nothing.
Video From The New Yorker
A Closer Look at President Trump’s State of the Union
One could barely get a night’s sleep before another White House aide, the speechwriter David Sorensen, was forced to resign after it was revealed that, during a background check, his ex-wife, Jessica Corbett, had told the F.B.I. that he had abused her by, among other acts, putting out a cigarette on her hand and running over her foot with a car.
Trump’s response on social media to these allegations was not entirely surprising. He tweeted his suspicion of the #MeToo movement, saying, “People’s lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation. Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused—life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?”
Trump responded with similar fellow-feeling when charges were levelled at Roger Ailes and Bill O’Reilly, late of Fox News, and Roy Moore, the right-wing former judge who had seemed headed to victory in an Alabama Senate race. (Trump, of course, is unforgiving when it comes to Democrats like Al Franken and John Conyers.)
Kellyanne Conway, whose defenses of Trump’s most preposterous statements are sometimes so tortured that they become the stuff of late-night satire, could not bear to back the President on this one. She told CNN that she saw “no reason not to believe” Porter’s former spouses. “In this case, you have contemporaneous police reports, you have women speaking to the FBI under threat of perjury,” Conway said. “You have photographs, and when you look at all of that pulled together, Rob Porter did the right thing by resigning.” This was hardly a condemnation, but, in the context of this White House and these times, she showed, if fleetingly, common sense.
Trump’s cruel and clueless remarks are of a piece with the tactics he has used to tamp down all his other scandals, miscues, and embarrassments. Just as he tries to divert attention from his, and his circle’s, errors and wrongdoing in the Russia scandal by shouting “fake news,” by casting blame on the F.B.I. and the Justice Department, and by deploying a congressional lackey like Devin Nunes, he diverts attention from his own encyclopedic record of miserable behavior toward women by casting doubt on the accusers. This is a neat trick, yet hardly original. It has come to the point when even Trump’s closest aides know that a reckoning is coming. It’s not going to be O.K.
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