Neo-Trumpers: The Next Mutation?

Photo by Ed van Teeseling. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

A New York Times columnist offering pointers for “Pitchfork Pat” Buchanan-type populists on “the isolationist right who thought Trump shared his views” might seem akin to a mad scientist named Frankenstein offering a road map to a pitchforks-and-torches peasant mob.  Yet Michelle Goldberg does just that in “The President Was Never Antiwar” (March 2).

While maintaining that Donald Trump was indeed the embodiment through which “the once marginalized politics of Patrick Buchanan became a dominant force in the Republican Party,” Goldberg insists that “Trump was never Buchanan’s heir when it came to foreign policy.”   While “it is true that he broke with key elements of neoconservative ideology,” he hasn’t distanced himself from even “the most fanatical of neoconservatives,” preferring instead to discard the ideology’s “notion that American power should ever be constrained by a veneer of idealism.”  The end result is “less a repudiation of neoconservatism than a mutation of it.”

Trump might, as Goldberg suggests, be “attracted to right-wing cranks of all stripes.” But “paleoconservatives who are skeptical of foreign entanglements” can trace their views back to Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams.  As Franklin Foer highlighted in The New York Times, during another rash Republican administration garnering “fierce loyalty from conservatives” to the point where rightist “backlash against the war may seem unexpected,” the Buchanan who “vociferously opposed Bush’s campaign against Saddam Hussein, just like he had opposed the one waged by Bush’s father” was drawing on a tendency that included Gerald Ford and John F. Kennedy, “not just angry farmers and protofascists.”

If none of those four forefathers were that peaceful as presidents, neither were they real-life versions of the reactionary rule of Charles Lindbergh as imagined by Philip Roth in The Plot Against America (what was for Foer in 2004 a “new counterfactual novel” dramatizing a dystopia of paleocon precursors).  Contemporary conservatives who “bemoan feminism, immigration and multiculturalism” have given up hope of a USA unshaped by such movements to the point where “they see no point in exporting its values abroad.”

By contrast, Goldberg points out that Trump being “anti-immigrant, hostile to free trade and given to John Birch Society-style conspiracy theorizing” is taken to show that he will cut off military maneuvering at the borders as well.  That doesn’t just ignore the longstanding observation by laissez-faire radicals that voluntary relations across state lines tend to defuse rather than fuel international tensions.  It’s almost as if Perseus didn’t bother with his painstaking tracking and taming of the mythological winged horse Pegasus in Clash of the Titans, but was satisfied with a particularly malodorous pile of manure.

Goldberg is on to something in noting how Trump’s persona evolved in an environment with “no real cost to his belligerence” … not even mentioning his 2000 interview in The Advocate magazine defining his politics in opposition to, not imitation of, “the things [Buchanan] had written about Hitler, Jews, blacks, gays, and Mexicans.” As Herculean as the task may seem, we don’t need a Greek demigod to clean up the political horse race.

New Yorker Joel Schlosberg is a senior news analyst at The William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism.

Thune and Johnson: A Tale of Two Orphans

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In The Joy of Yiddish, Leo Rosten defines chutzpah as “that quality enshrined in a man who, having killed his mother and father, throws himself on the mercy of the court because he is an orphan.”

Ladies and gentlemen, meet US Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) and US House Speaker  Mike Johnson (R-LA).

Thune: “Above all right now, with an enhanced terror threat from Iran and Iran-funded terrorist groups, it is vital that we ensure the Department of Homeland Security is fully funded and fully functioning.”

Johnson: “Perhaps most crucially of all, the military action in Iran makes it all the more urgent and crucial to have a fully staffed, fully funded Department of Homeland Security across all departments.”

From their respective perches atop both houses of Congress, Thune and Johnson have gone far out of their way  not only to ensure that the murderers of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis remain thus far unpunished, but to also spare those further up the “immigration enforcement” food chain —  Secretary of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem, for example —  any negative consequences for unleashing poorly-trained, ultra-violent goon squads on the American public.

As a direct result, Democrats (and Republicans still holding on to a shred of residual moral fiber) blocked funding for DHS until the matter gets settled.

Now Thune and Johnson, having busted their humps to spare US president Donald Trump the embarrassment of congressional repudiation of his illegal war of aggression and choice against Iran, are using their own fecklessness on congressional war powers as a tool to shame Democrats (and Republicans still holding on to a shred of residual moral fiber) into granting them a get out of jail free card on their PREVIOUS perfidy.

Sure, they killed Mom. Sure, they killed Dad. But lighten up already — after all, they’re orphans!

If that’s not chutzpah, I’m at a loss to say what possibly could be.

With the (weak tea) War Powers Resolution already dead for lack of passage in the Senate and the next round of votes on DHS funding pending as I write this column, we may already know whether their gambit worked by the time you read this.

Or maybe not. But either way, pay attention to the incentives here. Rewarding PAST bad behavior virtually guarantees FUTURE bad behavior … even more so when CURRENT bad behavior gets successfully used as Thune and Johnson are using it.

Thomas L. Knapp (X: @thomaslknapp | Bluesky: @knappster.bsky.social | Mastodon: @knappster) is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.

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On War Powers, Questions Aren’t a Working Substitute for Action

On February 28, US president Donald Trump took the United States into a de facto, but not de jure, state of war with Iran. That is, he ordered the US armed forces to strike targets in Iran (the de facto part) without first securing the constitutionally required declaration of war from Congress (the de jure part).

Since then, we’ve seen a lot of questions — and received conflicting and mutually exclusive answers to those questions — from, among others, members of Congress.

Why did he do it?

Oh, there was an imminent threat to the US even though there clearly wasn’t.

Oh, yeah, now I remember, it was to destroy the Iranian nuclear facilities Trump already claimed had been destroyed months ago, and to put an end to the Iranian nuclear weapons program that didn’t actually exist.

No, wait! It was because the Iranian regime was violently suppressing protests that had largely ended weeks ago! Yes, that must be it!

Or maybe the weather wasn’t right for a round of golf, or someone really annoyed him with a social media post, or Uber Eats messed up his hamberder order and put him in a bad mood, or who knows?

Why didn’t he go to Congress for that declaration of war as required by the Constitution, or at least seek an unconstitutional substitute for the  declaration (a “War Powers Resolution” or perhaps an “Authorization for Use of Military Force”), or even take the most minimal step, pre-briefing the entire “Gang of Eight” congressional leadership as required by 50 USC § 3093?

That’s an easy one: Because he didn’t have to.

When it comes to foreign policy, American presidents have been ignoring Congress at will and defying constitutional requirements for levying war, for decades. Longer than that actually  — Lincoln never sought or received a declaration of war for the Late Unpleasantness — and especially since the end of World War 2.

Occasionally a president bothered with an easily gotten “Authorization for Use of Military Force,” but more often he just did whatever he happened to want to do, then “reported” it to Congress per the War Powers Resolution’s requirements.

Even that bare minimum has broken down over the last 15 years, starting with Barack Obama’s war on Libya, which administration officials argued didn’t trigger reporting requirements because “kinetic military action,” isn’t the same thing as “hostilities.” Yes, really.

No president has ever been held to account by, and punished by, Congress for exceeding his powers and exercising its, not his, prerogative of declaring war or not.

Why would Trump consider himself an exception? And why wouldn’t he try to stretch past administrations’  ridiculous “unitary executive” claims even further?

We’d live in a much different world today if Harry Truman had been impeached and removed from office over his surprise Korean “police action” instead of receiving a retroactive congressional rubber stamp.

Tens of thousands of American soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines, and millions of enemy soldiers and civilian non-combatants, could have lived instead of dying in American presidents’ illegal wars.

Trillions of dollars could have been kept by taxpayers in the productive economy, or at least spent on things other than ships, planes, tanks, ordnance, foreign military expeditions and bases, salaries for bloated armed forces rosters, etc.

As to the current situation, Congress shouldn’t be asking questions — it should be taking action.

If we lived in anything like a “constitutional” polity, the House would have already delivered Articles of Impeachment and the Senate would be trying the matter of Trump’s removal from office right now.

Can we at least agree to stop pretending the Constitution matters anymore (if, indeed, it ever did)?

Thomas L. Knapp (X: @thomaslknapp | Bluesky: @knappster.bsky.social | Mastodon: @knappster) is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.

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