Le plus difficile n’est pas de dire ce que l’on voit mais d’accepter de voir ce que l’on voit. Charles Péguy
Qui veut noyer son chien l’accuse de la rage. LaFontaine
Nous crions d’un bout à l’autre de l’Afrique : Attention, l’Amérique a la rage. Tranchons tous les liens qui nous rattachent à elle, sinons nous serons à notre tour mordus et enragés. Sartre (1953)
Les deux grands partis, c’est l’amicale des boulistes. Mais sans l’amitié et sans les boules… Emmanuel Macron
La politique internationale que je veux conduire pour notre émancipation vraie et donc pour notre sécurité, c’est celle qui respectera l’équilibre, qui préservera l’indépendance française, qui assurera la stabilité des Etats et qui, partout, défendra nos valeurs et nos principes. Emmanuel Macron
Coup sur coup, Emmanuel Macron nous a dit en deux déclarations son rapport à l’Histoire. Affirmant qu’il n’existe pas de culture française, il s’inscrit , digne enfant du «terranovisme», dans cette perspective sans racines que le rapport avorté du conseiller d’Etat Tuot exaltait en 2013 pour mieux reconstruire un passé accueillant aux vents de tous les communautarismes. L’assimilation de la colonisation française en Algérie à un «crime contre l’humanité», outre qu’elle sur-infecte des plaies mémorielles chez nombre de nos compatriotes pieds noirs et harkis, criminalise notre histoire au service d’une repentance dont la visée électorale n’échappe à personne . Cette double prise de position à quinze jours d’intervalles efface les clins d’œil plus anciens à Jeanne d’Arc et au récit national que sa visite ministérielle au Puy-du-fou en terre vendéenne avait esquissé. Accélérant sa campagne, toute de symboles bien plus que d’offre programmatique, Macron déroule le discours dominant, celui de la com’, celui de la sidération par l’activisme communicant et par l’exaltation d’un imaginaire rallié au culte de l’immédiat . Le jeune Macron n’aime pas l’ancien ; il le fait savoir et à son corps défendant il en vient même parfois à l’avouer jusque dans une rhétorique post-oratoire nourrie d’un phrasé saccadé tout droit issu de cette culture «power-point» qu’il parle couramment à l’instar des nouvelles élites sans lettre ni mémoires. Macron s’installe ainsi, jour après jour, comme la plus exacerbée et exacerbante métaphore de la com’. Il en délivre tous les rythmes et tous les codes. Les premiers se manifestent par une hyper-saturation de l’espace médiatique, par un face-à-face permanent et construit avec les médias, par une économie de la com’ qui circule non pas du candidat au peuple mais du produit au people… Le marketing n’est pas tant celui du préau , du marché – lieux de mémoire des vieilles politiques républicaines – que celui des scènes calculées avec ses plans médias, ses salles chauffées par des agitateurs de shows télévisés, ses photos calculées à destination d’une presse magazine friande de poses prétendument spontanées mais millimétriquement sophistiquées. Macron reflète la société médiatique ; il en est tout à la fois le Narcisse et la Léthé, la déesse de l’oubli … Car là où souffle l’esprit de la com’ se déploie aussi le voile de l’amnésie. La com’ agit par magie ; elle vise d’abord à transformer notre rapport au réel, soit en le liquidant par dénégation et en lui substituant un avenir tout d’optimisme et d’harmonie, soit en exorcisant son passé. Macron joue des deux registres: il promet un horizon de bonheur consumériste et liquide les spectres d’une histoire lourde, belliqueuse, conflictuelle, traumatisante… Il est le héraut des générations mainstream pour lesquelles il n’y a pas d’Histoire mais des histoires qui viennent se greffer les unes aux autres, morceaux d’un puzzle très «united color» à la mode Benetton… Macron préfère la publicité au réel, on l’aura compris. Cette vieille culture française, son Histoire, il n’a sans doute pas appris à les aimer… et en ce sens il est le produit d’un temps où les maîtres ont failli à transmettre . Quand il n’y a plus de transmission reste alors la com’… Arnaud Benedetti
C’est une manière de s’exprimer qui rappelle la campagne de Tony Blair, en Grande-Bretagne. On l’appelait aussi le candidat du flou (« Tony Blur »). Enoncer des lieux communs permet à chacun de comprendre ce qu’il a envie de comprendre. Tout cela est très fluide et offre donc peu de prises à ses adversaires, au-delà du ‘ »ah, mais vous n’avez pas de programme !' » (…) Ces dix dernières années, nous avons eu des programmes-catalogues de plus en plus précis jusqu’aux 1.000 pages de Bruno Le Maire. Or, ça ne fonctionne pas car les Français n’y croient plus. La présidentielle se joue surtout autour de la confiance en un homme ou une femme politique. Emmanuel Macron préfère donc créer un imaginaire autour de sa candidature en utilisant des mots apaisants. Le programme de Macron, c’est Macron. Christian Delporte
Chaque réunion publique est guettée par les médias car elle révélera une facette inédite, tenue secrète longtemps et indéfiniment annoncée, du ‘produit’ fini (ici le programme), qui est toujours en projet, fruit d’ajustements en fonction du marché politique et des « feedbacks » de clients/électeurs sur les phases bêta. Cécile Alduy
Ces intellectuels tétanisés par la culpabilité postcoloniale battent la campagne médiatique. Ils font de l’islamophobie le ressort exclusif des grandes manifestations antiterroristes du 11 janvier… Proclamer « Je suis Charlie », c’est pour eux faire acte d’islamophobie ! Cette cécité les conduit à minimiser le péril djihadiste de peur de désespérer Molenbeek comme les compagnons de route du Parti communiste s’interdisaient de dénoncer les exactions du stalinisme de peur de « désespérer Billancourt ». Par-delà l’organisation terroriste Daech, qui a fracturé la cohésion rêvée de la patrie, je crois que deux forces de désintégration sont à l’œuvre dans la société française. D’une part, les mouvements communautaristes, qui font prévaloir l’appartenance religieuse et ses marqueurs dans l’espace public. De l’autre, une conception identitaire et étroite de la France, dont le fond est ethno-racial et xénophobe. Gilles Kepel
Nous pourrons nous souvenir de ce jour et dire à nos enfants (…) qu’alors la montée des océans a commencé à ralentir et la planète à guérir. Barack Hussein Obama (discours de nomination, St Paul, 04.06. 2008)
The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old, and their only reporting experience consists of being around political campaigns. That’s a sea change. They literally know nothing. (…) We created an echo chamber. They were saying things that validated what we had given them to say. Ben Rhodes (conseiller-adjoint à la sécurité extérieure d’Obama)
Je ne sais pas, on m’a donné cette information. En fait, j’ai vu passer cette information. Mais c’était une victoire très substantielle, vous ne croyez pas ? Donald Trump (18.02.2017)
Je ne considère pas le président-élu comme un président légitime. Je pense que les Russes ont contribué à aider cet homme à être élu. Et ils ont aidé à détruire la candidature d’Hillary Clinton. Ça n’est pas bien, ça n’est pas juste et ça n’est pas le processus démocratique. Je n’irai pas à l’investiture. John Lewis
Look, to be totally honest, if things are so bad as you say with the white, working class, don’t you want to get new Americans in? Bill Kristol
I think she’s the favorite. I have a sense that it would have happened anyway and that, at the end of the day, people were going to come home to who they were. And what’s depressed me, frankly, most about this race is, we went into this country a divided nation, and now the chasms are just solidified, so divided along race, divided along gender, urban/rural, college-educated/non-college-educated. We can go down the list. And, basically, less educated or high school-educated whites are going to Trump. It doesn’t matter what the guy does. And college-educated going to Clinton. Everyone is dividing based on demographic categories. And, sometimes, you get the sense that the campaign barely matters. People are just going with their gene pool and whatever it is. And that is one of the more depressing aspects of this race for me. (…) And, well, it’s a campaign of hate. Obama is a campaign of at least hope. At least his first campaign was. This is just a campaign of hate. And, you know, people who don’t like Trump really don’t like Trump. And I guess I’m among them. And we just saw in our report about the Trump voters in Pennsylvania. Did you see — when they were shouting on the road, did you see anything nice about Trump? No. Send Clinton to jail. (…) So we had a lot of good things over the years that were really good for America. I think globalization has been really good for America. I think the influx of immigrants has been really good for America. Feminism has been really good for America. But there are a lot of people who used to be up in society, because of those three good things, are now down, a lot of high school-educated white guys. And they have been displaced. And shame on us for not paying attention to that and helping them out. And, therefore, as a result, what happened was, they were alienated, they got super cynical, because they really were being shafted. And so they react in an angry way. David Brooks (November 5, 2016)
Theodore White wrote that America is Republican until 5:00 or 6:00 at night. And that’s when working people and their families got off work, had supper, and if America is going to vote — be Democratic, it’s going to happen between 5:30 and 8:00 at night. That has been totally turned on its ear. The working-class, blue-collar, non-college-educated base of the Democratic Party is the base of Donald Trump’s campaign this year. And the Democrats are now an upscale party. Mark Shields
How can we get rid of Trump ? We’re just a month into the Trump presidency, and already so many are wondering: How can we end it? One poll from Public Policy Polling found that as many Americans — 46 percent — favor impeachment of President Trump as oppose it. Ladbrokes, the betting website, offers even odds that Trump will resign or leave office through impeachment before his term ends. Sky Bet, another site, is taking wagers on whether Trump will be out of office by July. (…) Trump still has significant political support, so the obstacles are gargantuan. But the cleanest and quickest way to remove a president involves Section 4 of the 25th Amendment and has never been attempted. It provides that the cabinet can, by a simple majority vote, strip the president of his powers and immediately hand power to the vice president. The catch is that the ousted president can object, and in that case Congress must approve the ouster by a two-thirds vote in each chamber, or the president regains office. The 25th Amendment route is to be used when a president is “unable” to carry out his duties. I asked Laurence Tribe, the Harvard professor of constitutional law, whether that could mean not just physical incapacity, but also mental instability. Or, say, the taint of having secretly colluded with Russia to steal an election? Tribe said that he believed Section 4 could be used in such a situation. (…) The better known route is impeachment. But for now it’s hard to imagine a majority of the House voting to impeach, and even less conceivable that two-thirds of the Senate would vote to convict so that Trump would be removed. Moreover, impeachment and trial in the Senate would drag on for months, paralyzing America and leaving Trump in office with his finger on the nuclear trigger. My take is that unless things get much worse, removal may be a liberal fantasy. Progressives thought that Trump would never win the nomination or the election. He survived the “Access Hollywood” tape and countless crises that pundits thought would doom him, so it’s not clear why Republicans would desert him now that he’s president. Some people believe that the 2018 midterm elections will be so catastrophic for the G.O.P. that everyone will be ready to get rid of him. I’m skeptical. In the Senate, the map is disastrous for Democrats in 2018: The Republicans will be defending only eight Senate seats, while Democrats will in effect be defending 25. (…) And what does it say about a presidency that, just one month into it, we’re already discussing whether it can be ended early? Nicholas Kristof
We have never taken seriously from the very beginning Russia hacked our election. That was a 9/11 scale event. They attacked the core of our very democracy. That was a Pearl Harbor scale event. Can you imagine if Hillary Clinton were where Trump was, what the right would be doing on this issue? This goes to the very core of our democracy. Thomas Friedman
L’enjeu est trop important pour demeurer silencieux (…) Nous croyons que la grave instabilité émotionnelle révélée par le discours et les actions de M Trump le rend incapable de servir comme président de façon sécuritaire. Lettre ouverte de 35 psychiatres et personnels psychiatriques
Lancer des insultes psychiatriques est une mauvaise façon de répliquer aux attaques de M Trump contre la démocratie. Allen Frances
It was a wild press conference. (…) He spent the first part of his remarks talking about accomplishments that he thought the media, the fake media, whatever he wants to call us, we’re not paying enough attention to. But then, instead of focusing on these accomplishments and offering an optimistic, positive view of what he’s doing for this country, it was an airing of grievances. It was Festivus. It was complaints about the media. At one point, he said the leaks were real, but the news is fake, which doesn’t make any sense whatsoever. He said things that were not true. Peter Alexander from NBC pointed out one of them when (Trump) said he had the biggest electoral victory win since Ronald Reagan. That’s not true. Clinton, Clinton, Obama, Obama, George H. W. Bush, all were bigger. But, moving on. If you are a soldier in harm’s way right now, if you are a hungry child in Appalachia or the inner city, if you are an unemployed worker in a hollow shell of a steel town, that’s not a President that seemed focused on your particular needs and wants. That’s a President focused on his bad press. It was unhinged, it was wild and I can’t believe that there are Republicans on Capitol Hill and in the White House who don’t understand that might play well with the 44% of the population that voted for the President, but a lot of Americans are going to watch that press conference and think ‘That guy isn’t focused on me.’ I don’t know even what he’s focused on. Jack Tapper (CNN)
En août dernier, Donald Trump avait qualifié Barack Obama de «pire président» de l’histoire américaine. Avide consommateur de médias (même s’il les déteste), Donald Trump a sans doute vu passer l’enquête réalisée par la chaîne parlementaire C-SPAN. Et il n’a sans doute pas apprécié les résultats. Selon cette étude, publiée vendredi, les historiens classent Barack Obama au douzième rang des présidents américains, la meilleure performance depuis la neuvième place de Ronald Reagan en 1988. Dans trois catégories, Obama entre dans le top 10 : «quête d’une justice égale pour tous» (3e), «autorité morale» (7e) et «gestion économique» (8e). En revanche, il se classe parmi les derniers (39e sur 44) en matière de relations avec le Congrès et termine à une très moyenne 24e place en relations internationales. A en croire cette étude, les trois meilleurs présidents de l’histoire se nomment Abraham Lincoln, George Washington et Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Libération
Avec son sens du détail et son éloquence habituels, Donald Trump résume ainsi sa position : «Je regarde deux Etats ou un Etat, et j’aime la solution que les deux parties aiment. Les deux me conviennent». En une petite phrase digne d’un élève de CM1, Donald Trump balaie plusieurs décennies de diplomatie américaine. Le négociateur-en-chef est déjà au travail. Libération
I’ve got to say, with all due respect, Mika, you and immediate members of your family didn’t care four years ago or eight years ago when you all were running around screaming hope and change. Hope and change. What does that mean? And Barack Obama, remember? He said when I get elected, people will look back on this as the moment when the oceans began to recede. Joe Scarborough (July 2016)
Have you heard the one about the presidential candidate who was once so popular that comedians were frightened to make jokes about him? (…) Mr Obama has provided rich fodder for comedians looking to prick his pomposity, predicting that people would look back at his nomination as the moment « when the rise of the oceans began to slow ». He also told Congressmen that his campaign was « the moment . . . that the world is waiting for ». The attitude was summed up by Dana Milbank, the Washington Post’s resident political humourist, who declared: « Barack Obama has long been his party’s presumptive nominee. Now he’s becoming its presumptuous nominee. » Mr Letterman listed top ten signs that Barack Obama is overconfident, which included « Offered Bush 20 bucks for the ‘Mission Accomplished’ banner » and « Having head measured for Mount Rushmore. » Mr Obama is also under fire for moving politically towards the centre ground, moderating positions he had once boasted were evidence of his unique appeal. Jay Leno, of the long-running Tonight Show, said: « Barack Obama now says he’s open to offshore oil drilling. So, apparently, when he promised change, he was talking about his mind. » The Telegraph (09 Aug 2008)
Nobody could describe Donald Trump as lacking in self-confidence, but the billionaire egomaniac is emotional jelly compared with King Barack. Even before he won the Nobel peace prize, Obama was telling America that his elevation to the presidency would be remembered as ‘the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow’. He doesn’t have Mr Trump’s gold-plated helicopter, private jet, penthouse and yacht. But when it comes to self-reverence and sheer hauteur there is no one to beat him. Someone who believes his political personality can reverse global warming will have no doubts about his ability to persuade the British people to stay in the European Union. Just a few of his mellifluous sentences and a flash of those teeth and surely the British people will go weak at the knees! The polls show that Britain is split on the EU, so King Barack will come and help the nation resolve its indecision — to the delight of David Cameron and George Osborne. The timing of his visit, halfway through the EU referendum debate, is no accident. There is a longstanding international understanding that world leaders don’t visit during election campaigns — but such conventions were obviously designed for lesser mortals. Obama has no qualms and the Prime Minister has no shame: he needs every endorsement he can get. The Chancellor is pulling all the strings he can so the likes of the IMF’s Christine Lagarde ask us to stay in. Short of engineering a Second Coming, a visitation from King Barack is to their minds the best plug imaginable. That enthusiasm does not seem to be shared as much by British voters. Polls show that only 4 per cent of us think Mr -Obama’s primary reason for wanting us to stay in the EU is because ‘he cares about Britain’. A majority of us recognise that Mr Obama finds it easier ‘to deal with Europe as one bloc’. It’s not, as some Tory MPs have alleged, that Obama hates Britain. It’s just that he cares less about us — and our neighbours — than any of his recent predecessors. The ‘pivot’ to Asia, turning America’s strategic gaze away from Europe and towards the Pacific, has been his chief international objective. The turmoil in Europe and the Middle East — the Ukraine and Syrian refugee crises which have, at the very least, been encouraged by US withdrawal from the world — were distractions from his focus on China and the rising economies of East Asia. The world has not become a safer place as a result of Obama’s policy of ‘leading from behind’. (…) The arrogance is breathtaking but it is far from the only manifestation of, dare I say it, the madness of King Barack. Mr Obama does not let any adviser, voter or foreign leader get in his way. During his two-term presidency, his Democratic party has lost control of both the House of Representatives and the Senate. But King Barack was unimpressed at the verdicts of the people. By royal decree, or as the White House calls it, executive order, he has attempted to stop illegal immigrants being deported, increase the minimum wage, intensify gun regulation and cut greenhouse gas emissions. All of these policies may be cheered from Europe. But the US constitution is quite clear: it’s the job of the House of Representatives and the Senate to pass laws and it’s the job of the President to either veto or implement them. There is a word for ignoring and overruling the legislative branches of the American government and that word is ‘undemocratic’. It was not supposed to be this way when Mr Obama launched his transformational bid for the presidency. He came to national attention with an uplifting speech to the 2004 Democratic Convention. He told his party about gay Americans living in red-leaning Republican states and how blue-leaning Democratic states worshipped ‘an awesome God’. There weren’t red states or blue states but ‘one America: red, white, and blue’. An America demoralised by the Iraq war, the global recession and bitterness towards the often tongue-tied George W. Bush embraced Obama and his soaring oratory in 2008, in the hope that he would unite an unhappy, fractious nation. It has not come to pass, of course. Whether it’s the Black Lives Matter protests at police violence or the fact that only 1 per cent of Americans think the people who caused the 2008 crash have been brought to justice, the American left is as energised and angry as the right. Today, barely a quarter of Americans think their country is heading in the right direction. They are more pessimistic about their economic prospects than the Brits or Germans. You would, perhaps, expect the American right to be angry, because Mr Obama does little to build ties with them. He didn’t attend the funeral of the conservative Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia or that of Nancy Reagan — choosing to speak at a music festival instead. But his lack of respect and charity is not confined to Republicans. It recently emerged that Obama declined to invite the Clintons to dinner at the White House because Michelle, the First Lady, has struggled to forgive Bill Clinton for criticising her husband. Jeffrey Goldberg’s extraordinary recent essay in the Atlantic magazine about Obama’s foreign policy gave insight after insight into the President’s arrogance. Angela Merkel is ‘one of the few foreign leaders Obama respects’. When Obama reversed his Syrian policy and decided that President Assad’s crossing of those famous ‘red lines’ would not, after all, be punished, his secretary of state, John Kerry, and defence secretary, Chuck Hagel, found out hours after he’d told his advisers. It’s a common experience for so many of his colleagues. Hillary Clinton was overruled on Syria, generals were overruled on Iraq. Obama blamed David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy for the Libyan ‘shit show’. It is never King Barack’s fault. Obama’s election in 2008 inspired the world. But after eight years, it’s hard not to blame his abrasive style of politics for the rise of anti-politicians such as Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump. Americans are rebelling against the emergence of an imperial presidency. As Barack Obama offers his hand to the Queen this week, and lectures the British on their place in the world, voters here might feel somewhat resentful, too. Tim Montgomerie
Tiré à quatre épingles, col blanc éclatant et cravate rouge vif, l’homme grand, noir, élégant, fait son apparition sur scène devant des milliers de drapeaux américains portés par une marée humaine en délire. Des applaudissements se mélangent aux cris hystériques, pleurs et voix hurlant en chœur « Yes we can ». Les larmes coulent sur les joues du révérend Jesse Jackson qui vient d’apprendre que le rêve de Martin Luther King s’est réalisé en ce 4 novembre 2008. Et le monde entier assiste, le souffle coupé, à cette scène inédite de l’histoire. « Hello Chicago », lance le quadragénaire avec un sourire tiré des publicités de dentifrice. « S’il y a encore quelqu’un qui doute que l’Amérique est un endroit où tout est possible, ce soir, vous avez votre réponse. » Et la foule s’enflamme. Ce soir-là, Barack Obama a réussi son pari en devenant le premier président noir des Etats-Unis. Aux yeux de ses électeurs, il n’était pas seulement l’incarnation de l’ » American dream ». Il était aussi celui qui allait tendre l’oreille aux difficultés des minorités, sortir une nation de la pire crise économique depuis la Grande Dépression, ramasser les pots cassés de George W. Bush, soigner les plaies d’un pays hanté par la guerre et l’insécurité, rendre aux familles leurs soldats partis en Irak et en Afghanistan, offrir des soins de santé aux plus démunis… La liste est sans fin. (…) Les attentes étaient particulièrement grandes au sein de la communauté afro-américaine (…) « Tout le monde a cru qu’avec Obama nous allions rentrer dans une ère post-raciale. C’est donc assez ironique que la race soit devenue un problème majeur sous sa présidence », affirme Robert Shapiro, politologue à l’université new-yorkaise de Columbia. (…) Outre quelques discours, le Président se distingue par le peu d’initiatives prises en faveur de sa communauté. Certes, il a nommé un nombre sans précédent de juges noirs. Et, paradoxalement, cette reprise de la lutte pour l’égalité est parfois notée comme une victoire du Président, malgré lui. (…) Dans un premier temps, l’ancien sénateur a aussi suscité la colère des immigrés en situation irrégulière en autorisant un nombre record d’expulsions. Barack Obama finira par faire volte-face et s’engagera dans une lutte féroce pour faire passer au Congrès le « Dream Act », projet de loi légalisant 2 millions de jeunes sans-papiers. En vain. Furieux, le chef d’Etat signera alors un décret permettant à ceux-ci d’obtenir un permis de travail et donc de les protéger. Aussi, peu de présidents américains peuvent se targuer d’avoir fait autant progresser la protection des droits des homosexuels. En mai 2012, « Newsweek » surnommait Barack Obama « the first gay president », pour saluer sa décision de soutenir le mariage homosexuel. Quelques mois plus tard, la loi « Don’t ask, don’t tell », interdisant aux militaires d’afficher leur homosexualité, était abrogée. Et, en 2015, Barack Obama criait « victoire », alors que la Cour suprême venait de légaliser le mariage gay. Reste que le natif de Hawaii n’est pas parvenu à réduire les inégalités sociales et raciales qui sévissent toujours aux Etats-Unis. En 2012, 27,2 % des Afro-Américains et 25,6 % des Latinos vivaient sous le seuil de pauvreté, contre 9,7 % des Blancs. Autre épine dans le pied du Démocrate : la débâcle de la ville de Detroit, majoritairement peuplée par des Noirs et déclarée en banqueroute de 2013 à 2014. (…) Peut-être était-il trop dépensier. Surnommé « Monsieur 20 trillions », Barack Obama est accusé d’avoir doublé la dette publique. (…) L’histoire se souviendra d’Obama comme de celui qui aura doté les Etats-Unis d’un système d’assurance santé universelle. L’ »Affordable Care Act », lancé en 2010 après quinze mois de tractations, est « la » grande victoire du Démocrate. (…) Mais (…) le système montre-t-il ses limites puisque (…) il comprend (…) trop de personnes malades, nécessitant des soins, et pas assez de personnes en bonne santé. Ce problème est devenu récurrent et des compagnies d’assurances quittent le programme », explique Victor Fuchs, spécialiste américain de l’économie de la santé. (…) En 2009, le Président envoie 30 000 hommes supplémentaires en Afghanistan, pour ensuite déclarer la fin des opérations militaires en Irak, avant de bombarder la Libye. (…) Sa crédibilité en prend un coup lorsqu’il refuse de frapper la Syrie, même après que Bachar Al-Assad eut franchi la fameuse ligne rouge, tracée par Obama lui-même, en utilisant des armes chimiques contre les rebelles. En huit ans, le prix Nobel de la paix, arrivé au pouvoir comme un Président antiguerre, aura entériné le recours à la force militaire dans neuf pays (Afghanistan, Irak, Syrie, Pakistan, Libye, Yémen, Somalie, Ouganda et Cameroun). Le « New York Times » indique d’ailleurs que « si les Etats-Unis restent au combat en Afghanistan, Irak et Syrie jusqu’à la fin de son mandat […] il deviendra de façon assez improbable le seul président dans l’histoire du pays à accomplir deux mandats entiers à la tête d’un pays en guerre ». Le Congrès aura été le talon d’Achille de Barack Obama. (…) Résultat : l’adepte du « centrisme » laissera derrière lui un paysage politique plus polarisé que jamais. « Il n’y a pas une Amérique libérale et une Amérique conservatrice, il y a les Etats-Unis d’Amérique. Les érudits aiment à découper notre pays entre Etats rouges et Etats bleus […] mais j’ai une nouvelle pour eux. Nous formons un seul peuple », avait-il pourtant déclaré lors de la Convention démocrate de Boston le 27 juillet 2004. Ce jour-là, une star politique était née. Barack Obama avait tout : la rhétorique enflammée, le charisme hors norme, l’intelligence, le parcours au parfum de rêve américain et la famille idéale. Avec son style châtié, son allure juvénile, sa capacité à susciter l’enthousiasme des jeunes électeurs, il était le candidat parfait du XXIe siècle. Trop parfait, peut être. A tel point qu’il aura suscité plus d’espoirs qu’il ne pouvait en porter. « Il a été meilleur candidat en campagne qu’il n’a été président », regrette M. McKee. La Libre Belgique
My frustration (…) is that for eight years, I wanted the press to press President Obama on things like the jayvees, the red line, leading from behind, Aleppo, and they didn’t. And in the first month, they’re pressing Trump, and they’re upset that he’s not saying (…) things that Manhattan-Beltway media elites want him to say. Instead, he says this. Let me play for you, I think, the key line in the 77 minute press conference yesterday, is this one, cut number four: « Look, I want to see an honest press. When I started off today by saying that it’s so important to the public to get an honest press, the public doesn’t believe you people anymore. » (…) that’s the key. The public doesn’t believe you people anymore. (…) He never corrects anything that he says, and he says lots of wrong things. But that one comment, they don’t trust you anymore, is a summation of where we are in America, because I really do think Manhattan-Beltway elites have lost the country. They’ve lost it. There’s just no confidence in, I’m not going to say us, because I am neither in nor of the Beltway-Manhattan media elite. I live in California still. Hugh Hewitt
It’s not because of anything obviously Donald Trump did. The press did all that good work ruining its reputation on its own, and we can have a long conversation about what created that. Part of it, though, is what you mentioned about the local weather report, which is to say a lot of hysterical coverage about every little last thing that doesn’t warrant it. John Dickerson
If there are winners and losers in America, I know the losers. They lost jobs to China and Vietnam. And they’re dying younger, caught in an endless cycle of jail, drug charges and applying for disability to pay the child support bill. They lost their influence, their dignity and their shot at the American Dream, and now they’re angry. They’re angry at Washington and Wall Street, at big corporations and big government. And they’re voting now for Donald Trump. My Republican friends are for Trump. My state representative is for Trump. People who haven’t voted in years are for Trump. He’ll win the primary here on March 15 and he will carry this county in the general. His supporters realize he’s a joke. They do not care. They know he’s authoritarian, nationalist, almost un-American, and they love him anyway, because he disrupts a broken political process and beats establishment candidates who’ve long ignored their interests. Michael Cooper (writer, attorney, and liberal Democrat who lives in rural North Carolina, March 2016)
The mood in the Washington press corps is bleak, and deservedly so. It shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone that, with a few exceptions, we were all tacitly or explicitly #WithHer, which has led to a certain anguish in the face of Donald Trump’s victory. More than that and more importantly, we also missed the story, after having spent months mocking the people who had a better sense of what was going on. This is all symptomatic of modern journalism’s great moral and intellectual failing: its unbearable smugness. Had Hillary Clinton won, there’d be a winking “we did it” feeling in the press, a sense that we were brave and called Trump a liar and saved the republic. So much for that. The audience for our glib analysis and contempt for much of the electorate, it turned out, was rather limited. This was particularly true when it came to voters, the ones who turned out by the millions to deliver not only a rebuke to the political system but also the people who cover it. Trump knew what he was doing when he invited his crowds to jeer and hiss the reporters covering him. They hate us, and have for some time. And can you blame them? Journalists love mocking Trump supporters. We insult their appearances. We dismiss them as racists and sexists. We emote on Twitter about how this or that comment or policy makes us feel one way or the other, and yet we reject their feelings as invalid. It’s a profound failure of empathy in the service of endless posturing. There’s been some sympathy from the press, sure: the dispatches from “heroin country” that read like reports from colonial administrators checking in on the natives. But much of that starts from the assumption that Trump voters are backward, and that it’s our duty to catalogue and ultimately reverse that backwardness. What can we do to get these people to stop worshiping their false god and accept our gospel? We diagnose them as racists in the way Dark Age clerics confused medical problems with demonic possession. Journalists, at our worst, see ourselves as a priestly caste. We believe we not only have access to the indisputable facts, but also a greater truth, a system of beliefs divined from an advanced understanding of justice. You’d think that Trump’s victory – the one we all discounted too far in advance – would lead to a certain newfound humility in the political press. But of course that’s not how it works. To us, speaking broadly, our diagnosis was still basically correct. The demons were just stronger than we realized. This is all a “whitelash,” you see. Trump voters are racist and sexist, so there must be more racists and sexists than we realized. Tuesday night’s outcome was not a logic-driven rejection of a deeply flawed candidate named Clinton; no, it was a primal scream against fairness, equality, and progress. Let the new tantrums commence! That’s the fantasy, the idea that if we mock them enough, call them racist enough, they’ll eventually shut up and get in line. It’s similar to how media Twitter works, a system where people who dissent from the proper framing of a story are attacked by mobs of smugly incredulous pundits. Journalists exist primarily in a world where people can get shouted down and disappear, which informs our attitudes toward all disagreement. Journalists increasingly don’t even believe in the possibility of reasoned disagreement, and as such ascribe cynical motives to those who think about things a different way. We see this in the ongoing veneration of “facts,” the ones peddled by explainer websites and data journalists who believe themselves to be curiously post-ideological. That the explainers and data journalists so frequently get things hilariously wrong never invites the soul-searching you’d think it would. Instead, it all just somehow leads us to more smugness, more meanness, more certainty from the reporters and pundits. Faced with defeat, we retreat further into our bubble, assumptions left unchecked. No, it’s the voters who are wrong. As a direct result, we get it wrong with greater frequency. Out on the road, we forget to ask the right questions. We can’t even imagine the right question. We go into assignments too certain that what we find will serve to justify our biases. The public’s estimation of the press declines even further — fewer than one-in-three Americans trust the press, per Gallup — which starts the cycle anew. There’s a place for opinionated journalism; in fact, it’s vital. But our causal, profession-wide smugness and protestations of superiority are making us unable to do it well. Our theme now should be humility. We must become more impartial, not less so. We have to abandon our easy culture of tantrums and recrimination. We have to stop writing these know-it-all, 140-character sermons on social media and admit that, as a class, journalists have a shamefully limited understanding of the country we cover. What’s worse, we don’t make much of an effort to really understand, and with too few exceptions, treat the economic grievances of Middle America like they’re some sort of punchline. Will Rahn (CBS, 10.11.2016)
The United States (…) is one of the few successful multiracial societies in history. America has survived slavery, civil war, the Japanese-American internment, and Jim Crow—and largely because it has upheld three principles for unifying, rather than dividing, individuals. The first concerns the Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution, which were unique documents for their time and proved transcendent across time and space. Both documents enshrined the ideal that all people were created equal and were human first, with inalienable rights from God that were protected by government. These founding principles would eventually trump innate tribal biases and prejudices to grant all citizens their basic rights. Second, given America’s two-ocean buffer, the United States could control its own demographic destiny. Americans usually supported liberal immigration policies largely because of the country’s ability to monitor the numbers of new arrivals and the melting pot’s ability to assimilate, integrate, and intermarry immigrants, who would soon relegate their racial, religious, and ethnic affinities to secondary importance. Finally, the United States is the most individualistic and capitalistic of the Western democracies. The nation was blessed with robust economic growth, rich natural resources, and plenty of space. It assumed that its limited government and ethos of entrepreneurialism would create enough widespread prosperity and upward mobility that affluence—or at least the shared quest for it—would create a common bond superseding superficial Old World ties based on appearance or creed. In the late 1960s, however, these three principles took a hit. The federal government lost confidence in the notion that civil rights legislation, the melting pot, and a growing economy could unite Americans and move society in the direction of Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision (…) This shift from the ideal of the melting pot to the triumph of salad-bowl separatism occurred, in part, because the Democratic Party found electoral resonance in big government’s generous entitlements and social programs tailored to particular groups. By then, immigration into the United States had radically shifted and become less diverse. Rather than including states in Europe and the former British Commonwealth, most immigrants were poorer and almost exclusively hailed from the nations of Latin America, Asia, and Africa, resulting in poorer immigrants who, upon arrival, needed more government help. Another reason for the shift was the general protest culture of the Vietnam era, which led to radical changes in everything from environmental policy to sexual identity, and thus saw identity politics as another grievance against the status quo. A half-century later, affirmative action and identity politics have created a huge diversity industry, in which millions in government, universities, and the private sector are entrusted with teaching the values of the Other and administering de facto quotas in hiring and admissions. In 2016, Hillary Clinton ran a campaign on identity politics, banking on the notion that she could reassemble various slices of the American electorate, in the fashion that Barack Obama had in 2008 and 2012, to win a majority of voters. She succeeded, as did Obama, in winning the popular vote by appealing directly to the unique identities of gays, Muslims, feminists, blacks, Latinos, and an array of other groups, but misjudged the Electoral College and so learned that a numerical majority of disparate groups does not always translate into winning key swing states. At one point Clinton defined her notion of identity politics by describing Trump’s supporters: “You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right? The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up… Now, some of those folks—they are irredeemable, but thankfully they are not America.” (…) but (…) ethnic solidarity can cut both ways. In the 2016 elections, Trump won an overwhelming and nearly unprecedented number of working class whites in critical swing states. Many either had not voted in prior elections or had voted Democratic. The culture’s obsession with tribalism and special ethnic interests—often couched in terms of opposing “white privilege”—had alienated millions of less well-off white voters. Quietly, many thought that if ethnic activists were right that the white majority was shrinking into irrelevance, and if it was acceptable for everyone to seek solidarity through their tribal affiliations, then poor whites could also rally under the banner of their own identity politics. If such trends were to continue in a nation that is still 70 percent white, it would prove disastrous for the Democratic Party in a way never envisioned during the era of Barack Obama. Hillary Clinton discovered that Obama’s identity politics constituencies were not transferrable to herself in the same exceptional numbers, and the effort to ensure that they were often created new tribal opponents. (…) it is not certain that immigration, both legal and illegal, will continue at its current near record rate, which has resulted in over 40 million immigrants now residing in America—constituting some 13 percent of the present population. Trump is likely not just to curtail illegal immigration, but also to return legal immigration to a more meritocratic, diverse, and individual basis. Were immigration to slow down and become more diverse, the formidable powers of integration and intermarriage would perhaps do to the La Raza community what it once did to the Italian-American minority after the cessation of mass immigration from Italy. There are currently no Italian-American quotas, no Italian university departments, and no predictable voting blocs. (…) class is finally reemerging as a better barometer of privilege than is race—a point that Republican populists are starting to hammer home. The children of Barack Obama, for example, have far more privilege than do the sons of Appalachian coal miners—and many Asian groups already exceed American per capita income averages. When activist Michael Eric Dyson calls for blanket reparations for slavery, his argument does not resonate with an unemployed working-class youth from Kentucky, who was born more than 30 years after the emergence of affirmative action—and enjoys a fraction of Dyson’s own income, net worth, and cultural opportunities. Finally, ideology is eroding the diversity industry. Conservative minorities and women are not considered genuine voices of the Other, given their incorrect politics. For all its emphasis on appearance, diversity is really an intolerant ideological movement that subordinates race and gender to progressive politics. It is not biology that gives authenticity to feminism, but leftwing assertions; African-American conservatives are often derided as inauthentic, not because of purported mixed racial pedigrees, but due to their unorthodox beliefs. The 2016 election marked an earthquake in the diversity industry. It is increasingly difficult to judge who we are merely by our appearances, which means that identity politics may lose its influence. These fissures probably explain some of the ferocity of the protests we’ve seen in recent weeks. A dying lobby is fighting to hold on to its power. Victor Davis Hanson
Struggling rural America proved disenchanted with the country’s trajectory into something like a continental version of Belgium or the Netherlands: borderless, with a global rather than national sense of self; identity politics in lieu of unity and assimilation; a statist and ossified economy with a few winners moralizing to lots of losers—perhaps as a way of alleviating transitory guilt over their own privilege. The full lessons of the 2016 election are still being digested (or indeed amplified), but one constant is emerging that the world outside our bi-coastal dynamic, hip, and affluent culture is not very well understood by those who lead the country. The Left feels that the interior is a veritable cultural wasteland of obesity, Christianists, nihilist self-destructive behavior, and evenings that shut down at dusk in desperate need of federal moral and regulatory oversight. The doctrinaire Right advises the interior losers of globalization to hit the road in search of good jobs and take a hard look in the mirror and cure their self-inflicted pathologies. Such stereotyped pessimism about rural America are no exaggeration. (…) The plight of the contemporary rural America in a word was not due to an epidemic of laziness or of innate genetic ineptness, but more likely the onslaught of globalism, a sort of Tolkien master ring that gave its coastal wearers enormous power to create and manage worldwide wealth, prosperity, and power, but by its very use proved corrupting to those in its midst. (…) But the rural shakedown did not mean that our red-state interior tuned out from politics, big business, universities, government, popular culture and mass entertainment. Far from it; cable TV, the Internet, and smart phones plugged rural America into coastal culture as never before. And what fly over country saw and heard each day, it often did not like. The first disconnect between coastal and interior America was the elevation of race over class—with a twist of scapegoating the losers of globalization as somehow culpable winners because of their supposed “white privilege.” Fairly or not, the lower middle classes heard a nonstop message from mostly affluent white liberals and well-off minority activists, virtue-signaling one another by blaming those far less well off as somehow beyond redemption. So-called middle and rural America—oddly people more likely to put their children in public schools and assimilate and integrate than was the elite—grew accustomed to being insulted by Barack Obama as clingers, or by Hillary Clinton as “irredeemables” and “deplorables,” as popular culture became fixated on privileged whiteness. And that tired message soon became surreal: coastal white people with the money were liberal and accusatory; interior white people without it were conservative and thus culpable. The villains of television and Hollywood, when not corporate conspiracists, Russian oligarchs, or South African residual Nazis, were often redneck Americans with southern drawls. The new minstrel shows were reality television’s ventures into the swamps, the seas, the forests, the Alaskan wilderness, and the empty and endless highways, where each week with condescension we saw smoking, overweight and gap-toothed fishermen, loggers, and truckers do funny and stupid things with boats, saws, and semis. The second unwelcome message was the politicization of almost everything. Beyoncé turned her 2016 Super Bowl show, traditionally non-political entertainment, into a peaen to Black Lives Matter and the old Black Panther party. Multimillionaire Colin Kaepernick deflected attention from his own poor play on the field for the San Francisco 49ers by scapegoating America for its supposed -ologies and –isms—but of course himself did not take the trouble to vote. Hollywood actors, who make more in an hour than most do in a year, periodically finger-pointed at Middle America for its ethical shortcomings. Turn on late night talk shows or early morning chat sessions to receive the monotonous message that entertainment is properly indoctrination. Even charity became progressive politics. The locus classicus of multimillionaire moralizing was the Clinton team: she selling influence at the State Department, he collecting the ensuing checks at the Foundation; both veneering the shake-down with left-wing moralistic preening. (…) Third, the gulf in America between concrete and abstract things widened. Banking, insurance, universities, government, social media, and programing were reflections of the work of the mind and well compensated; fabrication, construction, transportation, drilling, mining, logging and farming were still muscular, essential for the good modern life—and yet deprecated as ossified and passé. The ancient wisdom of the necessary balance between thought and deed, muscle and mind, was forgotten in the popular culture of the coasts. Yet rural America assumed it could still learn how to use iPhones, search the web, and write in Microsoft Word; but coastal America did not know a chainsaw from a snow blower. A tractor or semi might as well have been a spaceship. And those with expansive lawns soon had no idea how to mow them. That divide by 2016 posed a Euripidean question: What is wisdom and who were the real dullards, who were the real smart ones: the supposed idiots with Trump posters on their lawn who swore they were undercounted, or the sophisticated pollsters and pundits who wrote off their confidence as delusional if not pathetic? Finally, speech, dress, and comportment bifurcated in a way not seen since the 19th century. Ashley Judd and Madonna might have thought screaming obscenities, vulgarities, and threats established their progressive fides, but to half the country they only confirmed they were both crude and talentless. What do Ben Rhodes, Pajama Boy, and Lena Dunham have in common? They all appeared to the rest of the country as arrogant, young, hip, and worldly without knowing anything of the world beyond them. Some object that Trumpism is pure nihilism and a vandal act rather than a constructive recalibration. Perhaps. But red-state America shouted back that if those who demanded open borders never themselves lived the consequences of open borders, then there would be no open borders. If those who proposed absolute free transfers of capital and jobs always expected others to lose money and jobs as the cost of the bargain, then there would be no such unlimited free flows. If the media were continually to stereotype and condescend to others, then they themselves would be stereotyped and talked down to. For a brief moment in 2016, rural America shouted that the last shall be first, and first shall be last. Before we write off this retort that led to Trump as a mindless paroxysm, remember that it was not those in Toledo, Billings, Montgomery, or Red Bluff who piled up $20 trillion in collective debt, nearly destroyed the health care system, set the Middle East afire, turned the campus into Animal Farm, or transformed Hollywood into 1984-style widescreen indoctrination. Trump was rural America’s shout back. One way or another, he will be its last. Either Trump will fail to restore prosperity and influence to the hinterland and thus even as president go the way of a flash-in-the-pan, would-be president Ross Perot—or he will succeed and thus make a like-minded successor superfluous.
Attention: un surréalisme peut en cacher un autre !
Surréaliste, hallucinant, déjanté …
Au lendemain d’une première conférence de presse du président Trump …
Pour laquelle nos médias n’avaient à nouveau pas de mots assez durs …
Alors qu’entre vote populaire, piratage russe, taille de la foule ou boycotts de l’investiture, fuites des services secrets, prétendues analyses psychiatriques ou appels explicites à l’assassinat …
Tout est bon, du premier DJ venu aux prétendus historiens, pour remettre en question la légitimité du choix du peuple américain …
Pendant qu’à coups de fuites judiciaires désormais quotidiennes et au profit d’un énième démagogue du déni et du « hope and change » …
L‘hallali continue en France contre le seul véritable candidat de l’alternance …
Comment ne pas voir …
Non seulement l’incroyable deux poids deux mesures comparé à l’élection d’un Barack Obama …
Présenté il y a huit ans comme le nouveau messie …
Mais l’incapacité proprement surréaliste des médias, sauf rares exceptions, à prendre toute la mesure …
Non seulement de la dimension historique d’une victoire (Congrès et postes de gouverneurs compris) que tout le monde annonçait impossible …
Face à la machine infernale qui avait laminé avant lui les trop gentils McCain et Romney …
Mais aussi de la défiance et de la colère de toute une partie de l’électorat américain …
Que les interminables chipotages actuels ne peuvent que renforcer ?
Commentary: The unbearable smugness of the press
Bill Rahn
Nov 10, 2016
The mood in the Washington press corps is bleak, and deservedly so.
It shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone that, with a few exceptions, we were all tacitly or explicitly #WithHer, which has led to a certain anguish in the face of Donald Trump’s victory. More than that and more importantly, we also missed the story, after having spent months mocking the people who had a better sense of what was going on.
This is all symptomatic of modern journalism’s great moral and intellectual failing: its unbearable smugness. Had Hillary Clinton won, there’d be a winking “we did it” feeling in the press, a sense that we were brave and called Trump a liar and saved the republic.
So much for that. The audience for our glib analysis and contempt for much of the electorate, it turned out, was rather limited. This was particularly true when it came to voters, the ones who turned out by the millions to deliver not only a rebuke to the political system but also the people who cover it. Trump knew what he was doing when he invited his crowds to jeer and hiss the reporters covering him. They hate us, and have for some time.
And can you blame them? Journalists love mocking Trump supporters. We insult their appearances. We dismiss them as racists and sexists. We emote on Twitter about how this or that comment or policy makes us feel one way or the other, and yet we reject their feelings as invalid.
It’s a profound failure of empathy in the service of endless posturing. There’s been some sympathy from the press, sure: the dispatches from “heroin country” that read like reports from colonial administrators checking in on the natives. But much of that starts from the assumption that Trump voters are backward, and that it’s our duty to catalogue and ultimately reverse that backwardness. What can we do to get these people to stop worshiping their false god and accept our gospel?
We diagnose them as racists in the way Dark Age clerics confused medical problems with demonic possession. Journalists, at our worst, see ourselves as a priestly caste. We believe we not only have access to the indisputable facts, but also a greater truth, a system of beliefs divined from an advanced understanding of justice.
You’d think that Trump’s victory – the one we all discounted too far in advance – would lead to a certain newfound humility in the political press. But of course that’s not how it works. To us, speaking broadly, our diagnosis was still basically correct. The demons were just stronger than we realized.
This is all a “whitelash,” you see. Trump voters are racist and sexist, so there must be more racists and sexists than we realized. Tuesday night’s outcome was not a logic-driven rejection of a deeply flawed candidate named Clinton; no, it was a primal scream against fairness, equality, and progress. Let the new tantrums commence!
That’s the fantasy, the idea that if we mock them enough, call them racist enough, they’ll eventually shut up and get in line. It’s similar to how media Twitter works, a system where people who dissent from the proper framing of a story are attacked by mobs of smugly incredulous pundits. Journalists exist primarily in a world where people can get shouted down and disappear, which informs our attitudes toward all disagreement.
Journalists increasingly don’t even believe in the possibility of reasoned disagreement, and as such ascribe cynical motives to those who think about things a different way. We see this in the ongoing veneration of “facts,” the ones peddled by explainer websites and data journalists who believe themselves to be curiously post-ideological.
That the explainers and data journalists so frequently get things hilariously wrong never invites the soul-searching you’d think it would. Instead, it all just somehow leads us to more smugness, more meanness, more certainty from the reporters and pundits. Faced with defeat, we retreat further into our bubble, assumptions left unchecked. No, it’s the voters who are wrong.
As a direct result, we get it wrong with greater frequency. Out on the road, we forget to ask the right questions. We can’t even imagine the right question. We go into assignments too certain that what we find will serve to justify our biases. The public’s estimation of the press declines even further — fewer than one-in-three Americans trust the press, per Gallup — which starts the cycle anew.
There’s a place for opinionated journalism; in fact, it’s vital. But our causal, profession-wide smugness and protestations of superiority are making us unable to do it well.
Our theme now should be humility. We must become more impartial, not less so. We have to abandon our easy culture of tantrums and recrimination. We have to stop writing these know-it-all, 140-character sermons on social media and admit that, as a class, journalists have a shamefully limited understanding of the country we cover.
What’s worse, we don’t make much of an effort to really understand, and with too few exceptions, treat the economic grievances of Middle America like they’re some sort of punchline. Sometimes quite literally so, such as when reporters tweet out a photo of racist-looking Trump supporters and jokingly suggest that they must be upset about free trade or low wages.
We have to fix this, and the broken reasoning behind it. There’s a fleeting fun to gang-ups and groupthink. But it’s not worth what we are losing in the process.
Voir aussi:
Commentary: Hot takes are written by the winners
Bill Rahn
June 29, 2016
Have you heard much recently about the white working class? If not, then you haven’t been paying attention to the pundits, a profession currently obsessed with divining their motives, parsing their logic, and blaming them for the sorry state of politics in the Western world.
And why not? The white working class is responsible for Donald Trump – just look at how he cleaned up in Appalachia during the primaries! They, or at least people like them, gave us Brexit, which caused even American media folk to convulse in despair, partly because this overseas event is somehow an indicator that Trump can win.
We think to ourselves: what will these idiots do next? What do they really want? How much of it is their fault? How much of it is ours?
Is drug addiction to blame? The decline of family and religion? Or what about neoliberalism, the retreat of the welfare state and the return of rapacious capitalism? Maybe they’re just racist. Maybe it’s a mix of all this, a bouillabaisse of grievances both real and imagined that just might spell the end of the global projects so beloved by elites.
Regardless, the white working class has captured the imagination of journalists, who have come to talk about them like colonial administrators would talk about a primitive inland tribe that interferes with the construction of a jungle railway: They must be pacified until history kills them off.
Just about all the mainstream punditry concerning the white working class, from the left and the right, fits this description. The elites (and if you write for a living, you’re a damn elite) all seem to be talking about a people who seem vaguely alien. There’s an anthropological quality to it, like when the New York Times’ David Brooks pledges to leave New York more often, living among the natives in order to better understand their dysfunction.
The reporters and pundits cloistered along the coasts look upon the white working class with a mix of fascination and disdain. The tribe’s beliefs, savage as they are, can be excused somewhat (« you know, free trade sure did kill a lot of their jobs ») or simply mocked (« these jerks don’t realize how good they’ve got it »). In either case, it’s easy to see we are all writing about people we can’t fully empathize with.
That’s the sort of statement that will rub a lot of journalists the wrong way, so let me explain. You don’t have to go far in Washington to hear an impressive, noteworthy person at this or that publication tell you about their hardscrabble upbringing on the mean streets of wherever, and that such meager beginnings don’t justify political radicalism.
Sure, OK. But every time you talk to someone who has a media job in New York or D.C., you’re probably talking about someone who has skills that our economy rewards, regardless of upbringing. They can write or speak or analyze something complex. They have abilities that haven’t yet been outsourced or automated. The people who report and talk about the news, for all their griping about low wages and the decline of print, tend to do quite well in our globalized economy.
The white working class is made up of people without such gifts. And moreover, because no set of policies can prioritize everyone, they were always designed to be the losers of our globalized economy. Their jobs would be taken away in the name of efficiency, with the marginal upside that the goods they purchase would be cheaper because they were now being made for less by people overseas.
So what we’re left with is a bunch of beneficiaries of the current economic order discussing the losers of the current economic order. And this raises the question of whether people who have a lot to gain from the status quo are well equipped to report accurately about how it’s cracked up.
Because that is what we’re seeing, a profound upending of the order of things. And predictably enough, journalists have been among the last people to realize this development, which makes more sense when you consider that the news is reported and analyzed by globalization’s winners, even as the subject increasingly becomes globalization’s losers.
The rise of Trump, a candidate tapping into a deep well of resentment that both conservatives and liberals were unwilling to touch, shouldn’t have come as such a surprise. Same with the Brexit vote — why are we so shocked that a multinational and barely democratic bureaucracy would be so unloved? Again, as reporters scramble to understand what in hell is going on with the world, we’ve seen a consensus develop that Britain surely must have left the EU by accident — a thesis that’s almost wholly dependent on a limited number of anecdotes about regretful voters.
Maybe. Or maybe the European project, like so many cosmopolitan initiatives, has just produced a lot more losers than the elites, including the press, ever accounted for.
Voir également:
A Message From Trump’s America
Working-class whites have been ignored by both parties, and they’re dying from despair.
Michael Cooper Jr. | Contributor
US News
March 9, 2016
Donald Trump received 70 percent of the primary vote in Buchanan County, Virginia, and 60 percent in Martin County, Kentucky. He is strongest in Appalachia because the biggest indicator of support for Trump, according to a survey by the RAND Corporation, is agreeing with the statement, « people like me don’t have any say. »
I live in Trump’s America, where working-class whites are dying from despair. They’re dying from alcoholism, drug addiction and suicide, trying to take away the pain of a half century’s economic and cultural decline. In the foothills of Appalachia, Wilkes County, North Carolina, is second in the nation in income lost this century, where the number of manufacturing jobs decreased from 8,548 in the year 2000 to about 4,000 today, according to Stateline.
On the losing side of automation, globalization and the « rural brain drain » our community was powerless to stop furniture factories from closing down or Wal-Mart from coming in. And after decades of decline folks were too beaten down and disorganized to fight back when pharmaceutical companies flooded the area with OxyContin. As a result, Wilkes had the third highest overdose rate in America in 2007 and busted 50 meth labs in 2013. [Overdose rates dropped 69 percent by 2011 after North Carolina responded to the crisis.]
Now, I walk into the courtroom every week and see the faces of childhood friends in a town where 23 percent of the population lives in poverty and 25 percent never finished high school.
So if there are winners and losers in America, I know the losers. They lost jobs to China and Vietnam. And they’re dying younger, caught in an endless cycle of jail, drug charges and applying for disability to pay the child support bill.
They lost their influence, their dignity and their shot at the American Dream, and now they’re angry. They’re angry at Washington and Wall Street, at big corporations and big government. And they’re voting now for Donald Trump
My Republican friends are for Trump. My state representative is for Trump. People who haven’t voted in years are for Trump. He’ll win the primary here on March 15 and he will carry this county in the general.
His supporters realize he’s a joke. They do not care. They know he’s authoritarian, nationalist, almost un-American, and they love him anyway, because he disrupts a broken political process and beats establishment candidates who’ve long ignored their interests.
When you’re earning $32,000 a year and haven’t had a decent vacation in over a decade, it doesn’t matter who Trump appoints to the U.N., or if he poisons America’s standing in the world, you just want to win again, whoever the victim, whatever the price.
Trump won’t win the presidency, of course. If he’s nominated conservatives will walk out of the Cleveland convention in July and run a third ticket candidate, and there are not enough disaffected white males in Pennsylvania or Ohio to make up for the independent women who would vote for Hillary Clinton in November. But the two parties can no longer afford to ignore Trump’s America.
To win again in the Deep South and Appalachia, the Democratic Party must recall the days of Roosevelt’s New Deal and Kennedy’s New Frontier by putting people to work rebuilding America, and making college free after two years of national service.
Trump’s appeal as a strongman reveals the desire in Middle America for public action. His supporters want healthcare, like Social Security and are frustrated by the gridlock on Capitol Hill, so they must return to the days of Eisenhower, standing for conservative principles but also compromising when possible.
As productivity climbed, working-class Americans wanted their wages to rise also. Instead, Republicans gave them tax cuts for the rich while liberal Democrats called them racists and bigots.
According to the Republican Party, the biggest threat to rural America was Islamic terrorism. According to the Democratic Party it was gun violence. In reality it was prescription drug abuse and neither party noticed until it was too late.
Unlike registered independents who are socially liberal and fiscally conservative, America’s non-voters tended to be poorer, less educated citizens who are fiscally liberal and socially conservative. Neither party listened to them, let alone represented this populist center, until Trump gave them a voice.
America will survive Trump’s campaign, and the temptations of protectionism and xenophobia he offers. But in the aftermath that follows, both political parties must start prioritizing the working-class for a change. And that starts by listening to Trump’s forgotten America.
Voir encore:
Struggling rural America proved disenchanted with the country’s trajectory into something like a continental version of Belgium or the Netherlands: borderless, with a global rather than national sense of self; identity politics in lieu of unity and assimilation; a statist and ossified economy with a few winners moralizing to lots of losers—perhaps as a way of alleviating transitory guilt over their own privilege.
The full lessons of the 2016 election are still being digested (or indeed amplified), but one constant is emerging that the world outside our bi-coastal dynamic, hip, and affluent culture is not very well understood by those who lead the country.
The doctrinaire Right advises the interior losers of globalization to hit the road in search of good jobs and take a hard look in the mirror and cure their self-inflicted pathologies. Such stereotyped pessimism about rural America are no exaggeration. Recently Bill Kristol, former editor of the Weekly Standard, seemed to dismiss the white working class as mostly played out—an apparent argument for generous immigration that was critical in replacing it: “Look, to be totally honest, if things are so bad as you say with the white, working class, don’t you want to get new Americans in?” He went onto imply that poor whites were purported lazy and spoiled in comparison to immigrant groups—a fact not born out by comparative rates of reliance on government aid programs. PBS commentator and New York Times columnist David Brooks earlier had suggested the white working classes who were voting for Trump did not exercise independent judgement, but as the less educated were just “going with their gene pool.”
The plight of the contemporary rural America in a word was not due to an epidemic of laziness or of innate genetic ineptness, but more likely the onslaught of globalism, a sort of Tolkien master ring that gave its coastal wearers enormous power to create and manage worldwide wealth, prosperity, and power, but by its very use proved corrupting to those in its midst.
As I look outside the windows of my farmhouse this morning and scan a 360-degree panorama, I can absorb globalization, its success and failures. The countryside is now devoid of farmers who used to anchor small-town life—everything from the school board to the Masonic Lodge—of the San Joaquin Valley of California. In its place is a mosaic of huge vertically-integrated corporate farms that have swallowed up the tesserae of failed small acreages and turned the land into the most productive and profitable food production units in the history of agriculture.
But who am I to look out the window at others, when the story is my own as well? All my siblings went belly up in small farming. I held on to the old homestead and a remnant 40 acres only by renting out to a superb farming corporation while earning my living from the coast. Such a strange Faustian bargain globalization proved to be: unlimited affluence for some without shared prosperity, instant electronic social media and communications without much to communicate, and hip culture without much cultural transcendence. I could assure Bill Kristol that my siblings who could not make a living when peaches went from $9 a lug to $4 and raisins crashed from $1,400 a ton to $450 were not lazy. And I would say to David Brooks that their genetic material did not preclude rational judgment.
America’s rural class was gobbled up in a variety of ways. The consolidation of agriculture, the outsourcing and automation of manufacturing, and franchising of retailing created an underclass dependent on social services and low wages. A smaller and mostly younger group got with the plan, left rural America, fled to the coasts or regional big cities, obtained the proper credentials and became successful. Some in between stayed on and went about their old ways, often confused that the familiar but often empty landscapes and infrastructure might still mean that business could go on as usual.
But the rural shakedown did not mean that our red-state interior tuned out from politics, big business, universities, government, popular culture and mass entertainment. Far from it; cable TV, the Internet, and smart phones plugged rural America into coastal culture as never before. And what fly over country saw and heard each day, it often did not like.
The Great Divides(s)
The first disconnect between coastal and interior America was the elevation of race over class—with a twist of scapegoating the losers of globalization as somehow culpable winners because of their supposed “white privilege.” Fairly or not, the lower middle classes heard a nonstop message from mostly affluent white liberals and well-off minority activists, virtue-signaling one another by blaming those far less well off as somehow beyond redemption.
So-called middle and rural America—oddly people more likely to put their children in public schools and assimilate and integrate than was the elite—grew accustomed to being insulted by Barack Obama as clingers, or by Hillary Clinton as “irredeemables” and “deplorables,” as popular culture became fixated on privileged whiteness. And that tired message soon became surreal: coastal white people with the money were liberal and accusatory; interior white people without it were conservative and thus culpable.
The villains of television and Hollywood, when not corporate conspiracists, Russian oligarchs, or South African residual Nazis, were often redneck Americans with southern drawls. The new minstrel shows were reality television’s ventures into the swamps, the seas, the forests, the Alaskan wilderness, and the empty and endless highways, where each week with condescension we saw smoking, overweight and gap-toothed fishermen, loggers, and truckers do funny and stupid things with boats, saws, and semis.
The second unwelcome message was the politicization of almost everything. Beyoncé turned her 2016 Super Bowl show, traditionally non-political entertainment, into a peaen to Black Lives Matter and the old Black Panther party. Multimillionaire Colin Kaepernick deflected attention from his own poor play on the field for the San Francisco 49ers by scapegoating America for its supposed -ologies and –isms—but of course himself did not take the trouble to vote. Hollywood actors, who make more in an hour than most do in a year, periodically finger-pointed at Middle America for its ethical shortcomings. Turn on late night talk shows or early morning chat sessions to receive the monotonous message that entertainment is properly indoctrination.
Even charity became progressive politics. The locus classicus of multimillionaire moralizing was the Clinton team: she selling influence at the State Department, he collecting the ensuing checks at the Foundation; both veneering the shake-down with left-wing moralistic preening. When Hillary lost her reins of power; Bill had no more influence to sell; the Foundation lost its reason to be, and the entire criminal enterprise was exposed for what it always was: QED.
Third, the gulf in America between concrete and abstract things widened. Banking, insurance, universities, government, social media, and programing were reflections of the work of the mind and well compensated; fabrication, construction, transportation, drilling, mining, logging and farming were still muscular, essential for the good modern life—and yet deprecated as ossified and passé. The ancient wisdom of the necessary balance between thought and deed, muscle and mind, was forgotten in the popular culture of the coasts. Yet rural America assumed it could still learn how to use iPhones, search the web, and write in Microsoft Word; but coastal America did not know a chainsaw from a snow blower. A tractor or semi might as well have been a spaceship. And those with expansive lawns soon had no idea how to mow them. That divide by 2016 posed a Euripidean question: What is wisdom and who were the real dullards, who were the real smart ones: the supposed idiots with Trump posters on their lawn who swore they were undercounted, or the sophisticated pollsters and pundits who wrote off their confidence as delusional if not pathetic?
Finally, speech, dress, and comportment bifurcated in a way not seen since the 19th century. Ashley Judd and Madonna might have thought screaming obscenities, vulgarities, and threats established their progressive fides, but to half the country they only confirmed they were both crude and talentless. What do Ben Rhodes, Pajama Boy, and Lena Dunham have in common? They all appeared to the rest of the country as arrogant, young, hip, and worldly without knowing anything of the world beyond them.
‘The Last Shall be First, and First Shall be Last’
Some object that Trumpism is pure nihilism and a vandal act rather than a constructive recalibration. Perhaps. But red-state America shouted back that if those who demanded open borders never themselves lived the consequences of open borders, then there would be no open borders. If those who proposed absolute free transfers of capital and jobs always expected others to lose money and jobs as the cost of the bargain, then there would be no such unlimited free flows. If the media were continually to stereotype and condescend to others, then they themselves would be stereotyped and talked down to.
For a brief moment in 2016, rural America shouted that the last shall be first, and first shall be last. Before we write off this retort that led to Trump as a mindless paroxysm, remember that it was not those in Toledo, Billings, Montgomery, or Red Bluff who piled up $20 trillion in collective debt, nearly destroyed the health care system, set the Middle East afire, turned the campus into Animal Farm, or transformed Hollywood into 1984-style widescreen indoctrination.
Trump was rural America’s shout back. One way or another, he will be its last. Either Trump will fail to restore prosperity and influence to the hinterland and thus even as president go the way of a flash-in-the-pan, would-be president Ross Perot—or he will succeed and thus make a like-minded successor superfluous.
Voir de plus:
Who are we? asked the liberal social scientist Samuel Huntington over a decade ago in a well-reasoned but controversial book. Huntington feared the institutionalization of what Theodore Roosevelt a century earlier had called “hyphenated Americans.” A “hyphenated American,” Roosevelt scoffed, “is not an American at all.” And 30 years ago, another progressive stalwart and American historian Arthur Schlesinger argued in his book The Disuniting of America that identity politics were tearing apart the cohesion of the United States.
What alarmed these liberals was the long and unhappy history of racial, religious, and ethnic chauvinism, and how such tribal ties could prove far stronger than shared class affinities. Most important, they were aware that identity politics had never proved to be a stabilizing influence on any past multiracial society. Indeed, most wars of the 20th century and associated genocides had originated over racial and ethnic triumphalism, often by breakaway movements that asserted tribal separateness. Examples include the Serbian and Slavic nationalist movements in 1914 against Austria-Hungary, Hitler’s rise to power on the promise of German ethno-superiority, the tribal bloodletting in Rwanda, and the Shiite/Sunni/Kurdish conflicts in Iraq.
The United States could have gone the way of these other nations. Yet, it is one of the few successful multiracial societies in history. America has survived slavery, civil war, the Japanese-American internment, and Jim Crow—and largely because it has upheld three principles for unifying, rather than dividing, individuals.
The first concerns the Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution, which were unique documents for their time and proved transcendent across time and space. Both documents enshrined the ideal that all people were created equal and were human first, with inalienable rights from God that were protected by government. These founding principles would eventually trump innate tribal biases and prejudices to grant all citizens their basic rights.
Second, given America’s two-ocean buffer, the United States could control its own demographic destiny. Americans usually supported liberal immigration policies largely because of the country’s ability to monitor the numbers of new arrivals and the melting pot’s ability to assimilate, integrate, and intermarry immigrants, who would soon relegate their racial, religious, and ethnic affinities to secondary importance.
Finally, the United States is the most individualistic and capitalistic of the Western democracies. The nation was blessed with robust economic growth, rich natural resources, and plenty of space. It assumed that its limited government and ethos of entrepreneurialism would create enough widespread prosperity and upward mobility that affluence—or at least the shared quest for it—would create a common bond superseding superficial Old World ties based on appearance or creed.
In the late 1960s, however, these three principles took a hit. The federal government lost confidence in the notion that civil rights legislation, the melting pot, and a growing economy could unite Americans and move society in the direction of Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision—“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
This shift from the ideal of the melting pot to the triumph of salad-bowl separatism occurred, in part, because the Democratic Party found electoral resonance in big government’s generous entitlements and social programs tailored to particular groups. By then, immigration into the United States had radically shifted and become less diverse. Rather than including states in Europe and the former British Commonwealth, most immigrants were poorer and almost exclusively hailed from the nations of Latin America, Asia, and Africa, resulting in poorer immigrants who, upon arrival, needed more government help. Another reason for the shift was the general protest culture of the Vietnam era, which led to radical changes in everything from environmental policy to sexual identity, and thus saw identity politics as another grievance against the status quo.
A half-century later, affirmative action and identity politics have created a huge diversity industry, in which millions in government, universities, and the private sector are entrusted with teaching the values of the Other and administering de facto quotas in hiring and admissions. In 2016, Hillary Clinton ran a campaign on identity politics, banking on the notion that she could reassemble various slices of the American electorate, in the fashion that Barack Obama had in 2008 and 2012, to win a majority of voters. She succeeded, as did Obama, in winning the popular vote by appealing directly to the unique identities of gays, Muslims, feminists, blacks, Latinos, and an array of other groups, but misjudged the Electoral College and so learned that a numerical majority of disparate groups does not always translate into winning key swing states.
At one point Clinton defined her notion of identity politics by describing Trump’s supporters: “You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right? The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up… Now, some of those folks—they are irredeemable, but thankfully they are not America.”
***
What is the future of diversity politics after the 2016 election? Uncertain at best—and for a variety of reasons.
One, intermarriage and integration are still common. Overall, about 15 percent of all marriages each year are interracial, and the rates are highest for Asians and Latinos. Forty percent of Asian women marry men of another race—one quarter of African-American males do, as well—and over a quarter of all Latinos marry someone non-Latino.
Identity politics hinges on perceptible racial or ethnic solidarity, but citizens are increasingly a mixture of various races and do not always categorize themselves as “non-white.” Without DNA badges, it will be increasingly problematic to keep racial pedigrees straight. And sometimes the efforts to do so reach the point of caricature and inauthenticity, through exaggerated accent marks, verbal trills, voice modulations, and nomenclature hyphenation. One reason why diversity activists sound shrill is their fear that homogenization is unrelenting.
Second, the notion of even an identifiable and politically monolithic group of non-white minorities is also increasingly suspect. Cubans do not have enough in common with Mexicans to advance a united Latino front. African-Americans are suspicious of open borders that undercut entry-level job wages. Asians resent university quotas that often discount superb grades and test scores to ensure racial diversity. It is not clear that Hmong-Americans have much in common with Japanese-Americans, or that Punjabi immigrants see themselves politically akin to Chinese newcomers as fellow Asians.
Third, ethnic solidarity can cut both ways. In the 2016 elections, Trump won an overwhelming and nearly unprecedented number of working class whites in critical swing states. Many either had not voted in prior elections or had voted Democratic. The culture’s obsession with tribalism and special ethnic interests—often couched in terms of opposing “white privilege”—had alienated millions of less well-off white voters. Quietly, many thought that if ethnic activists were right that the white majority was shrinking into irrelevance, and if it was acceptable for everyone to seek solidarity through their tribal affiliations, then poor whites could also rally under the banner of their own identity politics. If such trends were to continue in a nation that is still 70 percent white, it would prove disastrous for the Democratic Party in a way never envisioned during the era of Barack Obama. Hillary Clinton discovered that Obama’s identity politics constituencies were not transferrable to herself in the same exceptional numbers, and the effort to ensure that they were often created new tribal opponents.
Fourth, it is not certain that immigration, both legal and illegal, will continue at its current near record rate, which has resulted in over 40 million immigrants now residing in America—constituting some 13 percent of the present population. Trump is likely not just to curtail illegal immigration, but also to return legal immigration to a more meritocratic, diverse, and individual basis. Were immigration to slow down and become more diverse, the formidable powers of integration and intermarriage would perhaps do to the La Raza community what it once did to the Italian-American minority after the cessation of mass immigration from Italy. There are currently no Italian-American quotas, no Italian university departments, and no predictable voting blocs.
Fifth, class is finally reemerging as a better barometer of privilege than is race—a point that Republican populists are starting to hammer home. The children of Barack Obama, for example, have far more privilege than do the sons of Appalachian coal miners—and many Asian groups already exceed American per capita income averages. When activist Michael Eric Dyson calls for blanket reparations for slavery, his argument does not resonate with an unemployed working-class youth from Kentucky, who was born more than 30 years after the emergence of affirmative action—and enjoys a fraction of Dyson’s own income, net worth, and cultural opportunities.
Finally, ideology is eroding the diversity industry. Conservative minorities and women are not considered genuine voices of the Other, given their incorrect politics. For all its emphasis on appearance, diversity is really an intolerant ideological movement that subordinates race and gender to progressive politics. It is not biology that gives authenticity to feminism, but leftwing assertions; African-American conservatives are often derided as inauthentic, not because of purported mixed racial pedigrees, but due to their unorthodox beliefs.
The 2016 election marked an earthquake in the diversity industry. It is increasingly difficult to judge who we are merely by our appearances, which means that identity politics may lose its influence. These fissures probably explain some of the ferocity of the protests we’ve seen in recent weeks. A dying lobby is fighting to hold on to its power.
Voir de même:
We’re just a month into the Trump presidency, and already so many are wondering: How can we end it?
One poll from Public Policy Polling found that as many Americans — 46 percent — favor impeachment of President Trump as oppose it. Ladbrokes, the betting website, offers even odds that Trump will resign or leave office through impeachment before his term ends.
Sky Bet, another site, is taking wagers on whether Trump will be out of office by July.
There have been more than 1,000 references to “Watergate” in the news media in the last week, according to the Nexis archival site, with even some conservatives calling for Trump’s resignation or warning that he could be pushed out. Dan Rather, the former CBS News anchor who covered Watergate, says that Trump’s Russia scandal isn’t now at the level of Watergate but could become at least as big.
Maybe things will settle down. But what is striking about Trump is not just the dysfunction of his administration but also the — vigorously denied — allegations that Trump’s team may have cooperated with Vladimir Putin to steal the election. What’s also different is the broad concern that Trump is both: A) unfit for office, and B) dangerously unstable. One pro-American leader in a foreign country called me up the other day and skipped the preliminaries, starting with: “What the [expletive] is wrong with your country?”
So let’s investigate: Is there any way out?
Trump still has significant political support, so the obstacles are gargantuan. But the cleanest and quickest way to remove a president involves Section 4 of the 25th Amendment and has never been attempted. It provides that the cabinet can, by a simple majority vote, strip the president of his powers and immediately hand power to the vice president. The catch is that the ousted president can object, and in that case Congress must approve the ouster by a two-thirds vote in each chamber, or the president regains office.
The 25th Amendment route is to be used when a president is “unable” to carry out his duties. I asked Laurence Tribe, the Harvard professor of constitutional law, whether that could mean not just physical incapacity, but also mental instability. Or, say, the taint of having secretly colluded with Russia to steal an election?
Tribe said that he believed Section 4 could be used in such a situation.
“In the unlikely event that Pence and a majority of Trump’s bizarre cabinet were to grow the spine needed to do the right thing with the process set up by that provision, we would surely be in a situation where a very large majority of the public, including a very substantial percentage of Trump’s supporters, would back if not insist upon such a move,” Tribe said. “In that circumstance, I can’t imagine Trump and his lawyers succeeding in getting the federal courts to interfere.”
The better known route is impeachment. But for now it’s hard to imagine a majority of the House voting to impeach, and even less conceivable that two-thirds of the Senate would vote to convict so that Trump would be removed. Moreover, impeachment and trial in the Senate would drag on for months, paralyzing America and leaving Trump in office with his finger on the nuclear trigger.
My take is that unless things get much worse, removal may be a liberal fantasy. Progressives thought that Trump would never win the nomination or the election. He survived the “Access Hollywood” tape and countless crises that pundits thought would doom him, so it’s not clear why Republicans would desert him now that he’s president.
Some people believe that the 2018 midterm elections will be so catastrophic for the G.O.P. that everyone will be ready to get rid of him. I’m skeptical. In the Senate, the map is disastrous for Democrats in 2018: The Republicans will be defending only eight Senate seats, while Democrats will in effect be defending 25.
So while Democrats can gnash their teeth, it’ll be up to Republicans to decide whether to force Trump out. And that won’t happen unless they see him as ruining their party as well as the nation.
“The only incentive for Republicans to act — with or without the cabinet — is the same incentive Republicans had in 1974 to insist on Nixon’s resignation,” Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia told me. “The incentive is survival.”
Trump does have one weakness, and it’s parallel to Nixon’s. Republicans in Congress were willing to oust Nixon partly because they vastly preferred his vice president, Gerald Ford — just as congressional Republicans prefer Mike Pence today.
If I were betting, I’d say we’re stuck with Trump for four years. But as Sabato says: “Lots of things about Donald Trump’s election and early presidency have been shocking. Why should it stop now?”
And what does it say about a presidency that, just one month into it, we’re already discussing whether it can be ended early?
Voir de plus:
When President Obama’s National Security Advisor Lied, The Media Laughed
Julie Kelly
Buried deep beneath the Michael Flynn hysteria this week was Judicial Watch’s release of newly obtained State Department documents related to the Benghazi terrorist attack on September 11, 2012. One email confirms—again—that the Obama administration knew the day after the attack it was not a random act of violence stemming from an anti-Muslim video. That was the excuse shamefully propagated by top Obama administration officials (including the president himself) and swallowed whole by a media establishment desperate to help Obama win re-election six weeks later.
According to the summary of a call on September 12, 2012 between State Department Under-Secretary Patrick Kennedy and several congressional staffers, Kennedy was asked if the attack came under cover of protest: “No this was a direct breaching attack,” he answered. Kennedy also denied the attack was coordinated with the protests in Cairo over the video: “Attack in Cairo was a demonstration. There were no weapons shown or used. A few cans of spray paint.”
It’s somewhat ironic—galling?—that this email was disclosed the same day the anti-Trump universe was spinning into the stratosphere over Flynn’s resignation as President Trump’s national security advisor. It begs for a little trip down memory lane, to a kinder, gentler time when the media gave a great big pass to another national security advisor in the days after four Americans, including an ambassador, were murdered in Libya by Islamic terrorists under her watch.
Lying to Us Only Matters If We Dislike You
Fun fact: While Trump press secretary Sean Spicer fielded 55 questions on February 14 related to the Flynn debacle, Obama’s press secretary Jay Carney received only 13 questions from reporters on September 12, 2012, three of which were set-ups to blast Mitt Romney’s criticism of the administration after the attack. 55 to 13.
So as we now suffer through yet another patch of media mania, conspiracy theories, and unsubstantiated claims about how Trump hearts Russia, as well as the daily beatings endured by Spicer, let’s reminisce to when the media and Obama’s press flaks spun, deflected—even joked about golf and “Saturday Night Live!”—less than a week after Benghazi.
The day after Hillary Clinton’s deputy had that call with key Capitol Hill staffers, including advisors to senators Durbin, Feinstein, and McGaskill, to dispute the notion the attack was about an anti-Muslim video, here’s what Carney said: “I think it’s important to note with regards to that protest that there are protests taking place in different countries across the world that are responding to the movie that has circulated on the Internet. As Secretary Clinton said today, the United States government had nothing to do with this movie. We reject its message and its contents. We find it disgusting and reprehensible.”
On September 14, hours before the remains of the Benghazi victims would arrive at Andrews Air Force Base, Carney was still blaming the video. Just steps from the Oval Office, Carney opened his briefing with this: “First of all, we are obviously closely monitoring developments in the region today. You saw that following the incidents in response to this video, the president directed the administration to take a number of steps to prepare for continued unrest.”
Carney went on to mention the video/film/movie another 30 times during his briefing. He stuck with his story even after some reporters pushed back, citing other sources who said it was indeed a pre-mediated attack. One reporter said several senators admitted the “attack on Benghazi was a terrorist attack organized and carried out by terrorists, that it was premeditated, a calculated act of terror,” and asked Carney, “is there anything more you can — now that the administration is briefing senators on this, is there anything more you can tell us?”
Carney: “Again, it’s actively under investigation, both the Benghazi attack and incidents elsewhere. And my point was that we don’t have and did not have concrete evidence to suggest that this was not in reaction to the film. But we’re obviously investigating the matter…” Who cares, Sean Spicer called Justin Trudeau Joe, OMG!
Susan Rice’s Audacity of Trope
But of course nothing matches the audacity of trope by Obama’s National Security Advisor Susan Rice on September 16, 2012. Rice went on several Sunday shows to peddle a story she knew was completely phony, one that was already quickly unraveling even as most in the media and administration tried to keep it intact.
You can read most of her comments here, but Rice repeats the line that Benghazi attack was not premediated and was connected to the demonstrations in Cairo over the video (a document obtained by Judicial Watch last year shows Hillary Clinton met with Rice a few days before her television appearances). Which presidential administration is fact-challenged, again?
In a press gaggle on Air Force One the next day, guess how many times Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest was asked about Rice’s comments? Ten? Five? One? Not once. Let me repeat that. The day after Obama’s national security advisor was on five news programs to blame a terrorist attack on a YouTube video, not one reporter asked the White House about it. I actually had to re-read the transcripts several times, even checking the date over and over, to make sure this was accurate. Her name did not even come up.
No discussion about the investigation. No discussion about emerging evidence from around the world that Benghazi was indeed a terrorist attack. (The only time it was mentioned was when Jen Psaki criticized Mitt Romney’s comments about how the administration handled Benghazi and questioned whether he was ready for “primetime.”)
Here’s what they did discuss: Debate prep, Occupy Wall Street, and the Chicago’s teachers strike. An actual human reporter asked this: “It was a beautiful weekend for golf and he wasn’t out on the course. Is it safe to assume maybe he was doing some preparation at the White House?” WHAT? Then they joked about football and “Saturday Night Live.”
Sometimes the hypocrisy, double standard, and outright lies by the media under the Trump presidency is funny. Sometimes it is infuriating. But never was the media’s complicit sheep-like coverage more evident than it the days after Benghazi, behavior you can never imagine now. They have yet to admit their mistakes and failures, even as more evidence is revealed.
Remember that the next time you want to worry about how Trump is responsible for undermining the media’s integrity and credibility.
Voir par ailleurs:
US Election 2008: The joke is finally on Barack Obama
Have you heard the one about the presidential candidate who was once so popular that comedians were frightened to make jokes about him?
Tim Shipman in Washington
The Telegraph
09 Aug 2008
The punchline is this: the more seriously he took himself, the more Barack Obama has become a laughing matter.
Only a month ago American comedians and satirists were complaining that they found it hard to get people to laugh at the first black presidential nominee. A New Yorker cover cartoon showing him as a Muslim extremist was roundly denounced.
But growing Obama fatigue among voters after his pseudo-presidential visit to Europe and the Middle East has unleashed a wave of satirical fire, mocking Mr Obama for his apparent belief that he has the election in the bag.
Last month Jon Stewart, host of the satirical news programme The Daily Show, had to tell his audience that they were allowed to laugh at Mr Obama after a joke fell flat.
But Mr Stewart made comedic hay during the Illinois Senator’s international trip, mocking his progress through the Holy Land, where he said the candidate stopped « in Bethlehem to see the manger where he was born. »
Late night comic Jimmy Kimmel also cracked a joke at Mr Obama’s expense: « They really love Barack Obama in Germany. He’s like a rock star over there. Impressive until you realise that David Hasselhoff is also like a rock star over there. »
The jokes are important because they increasingly draw on evidence that voters are tiring of Mr Obama’s elevated opinion of himself, the wall to wall coverage of his pronouncements, and the feeling that he should concentrate on voters back home.
A writer with one of the leading comedy shows in the US, who preferred not to be named because of continuing sensitivities about how far comedians should go from some network executives, said: « We had a hard time convincing people that Obama is funny for a long time. Our audiences seemed unsure whether to laugh at him. The first black president is not a gag. But that’s changing because he’s doing more stuff that’s easy to mock and people are more familiar with him. »
Too familiar, some say. A poll last week by Pew research found 48 percent of those questioned said they had been hearing too much about the Democratic presidential candidate recently, nearly double the figure for his Republican rival John McCain.
Mr Obama has provided rich fodder for comedians looking to prick his pomposity, predicting that people would look back at his nomination as the moment « when the rise of the oceans began to slow ».
He also told Congressmen that his campaign was « the moment . . . that the world is waiting for ».
The attitude was summed up by Dana Milbank, the Washington Post’s resident political humourist, who declared: « Barack Obama has long been his party’s presumptive nominee. Now he’s becoming its presumptuous nominee. »
Mr Letterman listed top ten signs that Barack Obama is overconfident, which included « Offered Bush 20 bucks for the ‘Mission Accomplished’ banner » and « Having head measured for Mount Rushmore. »
Mr Obama is also under fire for moving politically towards the centre ground, moderating positions he had once boasted were evidence of his unique appeal.
Jay Leno, of the long-running Tonight Show, said: « Barack Obama now says he’s open to offshore oil drilling. So, apparently, when he promised change, he was talking about his mind. »
BEST OBAMA JOKES
Craig Ferguson: « Barack Obama was in Germany » today, and « he did this speech and 100,000 people showed up. There were so many Germans shouting and screaming that France…surrendered just in case. »
Jimmy Kimmel: « They really love Barack Obama in Germany. He’s like a rock star over there. Impressive until you realize that David Hasselhoff is also like a rock star over there. »
David Letterman: Signs Barack Obama Is Overconfident.
Proposed bill to change Oklahoma to ‘Oklabama.’
Offered Bush 20 bucks for the ‘Mission Accomplished’ banner.
Asked guy at Staples, ‘Which chair will work best in an oval-shaped office?’
Having head measured for Mount Rushmore.
Offered McCain a job in gift shop at Obama Presidential Library.
Jay Leno: « Of course, Obama’s supporters got him his usual birthday gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. »
Jay Leno: « Obama’s people are trying to portray McCain as cranky, and McCain is trying to portray Obama as arrogant, you see. And when Obama was asked what he thought about being called arrogant, well, he said he was ‘above having to answer that question.' »
Jay Leno: « See Barack Obama on the news? He’s becoming a workout fanatic. He’s at the gym, like, twice a day, sometimes three times a day at the gym, yeah, according to his staff. Well, he has to stay in shape to do those flip-flops. »
Jay Leno: « Barack Obama back from his big European tour. Did you see him in Europe? People were cheering him, holding up signs, blowing him kisses. And that was just the American media covering the story. »
Première démission, rupture diplomatique, conférence de presse surréaliste : Trump en roue libre
Le président américain, visiblement éprouvé, a traversé cette semaine la première crise majeure de son mandat. Et elle vient de l’intérieur de son administration.
Samedi 11 février – Secret défense à la bougie
Tout le week-end, Donald Trump recevait le premier ministre japonais Shinzo Abe dans son club privé de Mar-a-Lago, en Floride. Samedi soir, les entrées du dîner, une salade arrosée de sauce au bleu, venaient d’être servies quand le président américain a reçu un appel : la Corée du nord venait de lancer un missile balistique de moyenne portée. La suite est stupéfiante. Plutôt que de se retirer dans une salle sécurisée, Trump et Abe ont évoqué le sujet à leur table, sur la terrasse. Faute d’éclairage suffisant, des conseillers des deux dirigeants ont éclairé des documents avec leur téléphone portable. Le tout à quelques mètres de richissimes membres du club venus, eux aussi, dîner à la bougie. Officiellement, le président américain avait été informé plus tôt, et dans une salle sécurisée, de la provocation de Pyongyang. Et les documents étalés sur la table n’étaient pas confidentiels. Les observateurs ne sont guère convaincus. Et soulignent l’hypocrisie de Donald Trump qui, tout au long de la campagne, n’a eu de cesse d’attaquer Hillary Clinton sur sa gestion chaotique des informations confidentielles.
Dimanche 12 février – «Abus de pouvoir judiciaire»
ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News : le benjamin des hommes clés du président, Stephen Miller, a fait le tour des émissions politiques dominicales. A 31 ans, le conseiller politique de Donald Trump – dont il est aussi la «plume» – a défendu avec véhémence le décret anti-immigration du président, suspendu par la justice. «Les pouvoirs du président en ce domaine ne peuvent pas être contestés. Ce pays ne vit pas dans un régime de suprématie judiciaire», a-t-il martelé sur Fox News, criant à l’«abus de pouvoir judiciaire». Il faut dire que pour le très droitier Miller, l’échec du décret controversé est personnel. Selon plusieurs sources, il a fait partie du cercle restreint de conseillers chargés de sa rédaction. Après quelques jours de réflexion, la Maison Blanche a finalement décidé de ne pas poursuivre la bataille en justice. Au lieu de ça, un nouveau décret devrait être signé en début de semaine prochaine par Donald Trump. Un texte préparé, cette fois, par des experts et des juristes.
Lundi 13 février – Trump est-il malade ?
Le débat avait déjà fait rage lors de la campagne, poussant l’Association américaine de psychiatrie à rappeler à l’ordre ses membres. Pas question, prévenait-elle dans un communiqué, de se livrer à une quelconque analyse mentale du patient Trump. Les débuts chaotiques du nouveau président ont relancé les discussions. Lundi, une trentaine de professionnels de la santé mentale ont adressé une lettre ouverte au New York Times. «L’enjeu est trop important pour demeurer silencieux», écrivent-t-ils, dénonçant notamment «l’incapacité» du président «à tolérer des opinions différentes des siennes» et «sa profonde incapacité à faire preuve d’empathie». En conclusion, les auteurs de la lettre disent croire que «la grave instabilité émotionnelle indiquée par les discours et les actions de M. Trump le rendent incapable de servir sans risque comme président».
Mardi 14 février – La Maison Blanche en crise
Donald Trump avait sans doute rêvé d’une autre Saint-Valentin. Ce mardi, on est loin de l’ambiance mots d’amour et bouquets de fleur. C’est la crise, la grosse, à la Maison Blanche. La veille au soir, le conseiller à la sécurité nationale, Michael Flynn, a démissionné à la demande de Donald Trump. Une première aussi tôt dans une présidence américaine. Ancien général, Flynn paie officiellement le prix de ses mensonges au vice-président Mike Pence, à qui il aurait assuré n’avoir jamais parlé des sanctions contre la Russie lors de ses conversations téléphoniques avec l’ambassadeur russe à Washington. La presse, alimentées par des fuites massives au sein des services de renseignement, révèle que cela a pourtant été le cas. Au-delà du cas Flynn, l’épineux dossier des relations troubles entre l’équipe Trump et le Kremlin refait surface. Il n’est sans doute pas prêt de disparaître.
Mercredi 15 février – Négociateur en chef
Après Theresa May, Shinzo Abe et Justin Trudeau, Donald Trump reçoit à la Maison Blanche le Premier ministre israélien, Benyamin Netanyahu. Dans les heures précédant la rencontre, l’administration américaine fait planer le doute sur l’appui à la «solution à deux Etats» au Proche-Orient. Avec son sens du détail et son éloquence habituels, Donald Trump résume ainsi sa position : «Je regarde deux Etats ou un Etat, et j’aime la solution que les deux parties aiment. Les deux me conviennent». En une petite phrase digne d’un élève de CM1, Donald Trump balaie plusieurs décennies de diplomatie américaine. Le négociateur-en-chef est déjà au travail.
Jeudi 16 février – 77 minutes de folie
Attendue fébrilement chaque samedi soir, l’imitation de Donald Trump par Alec Baldwin au Saturday Night Live vaut son pesant de cacahuètes. Mais l’acteur américain, salué à chacun de ses performances, arrivera-t-il seulement un jour à la hauteur de l’original ? Le Donald n’est jamais aussi bon que lorsqu’il fait le show. Et jeudi après-midi, sous les dorures de la East Room de la Maison Blanche, il avait décidé de descendre dans l’arène pour se payer son ennemi favori : les médias. Pendant les 77 minutes d’une conférence de presse extrêmement tendue, débutée par un long monologue de doléances et d’auto-satisfaction, Donald Trump a rendu coup pour coup. Il a critiqué les médias «très très malhonnêtes», n’hésitant pas à demander à un journaliste de se taire, à un autre de s’asseoir. Il a promis de pourchasser les auteurs des «fuites criminelles» d’informations confidentielles et nié toute collusion avec la Russie. Au jour 28 de sa présidence (sur 1460), Donald Trump a dégoupillé. Le ton de la campagne est de retour : taper fort, mentir souvent, détourner l’attention à tout prix. Décidément, le milliardaire a bien du mal à abandonner le costume de candidat pour endosser celui de président.
A suivre Trump au jour le jour
Vendredi 17 février – Obama dans le haut du panier
En août dernier, Donald Trump avait qualifié Barack Obama de «pire président» de l’histoire américaine. Avide consommateur de médias (même s’il les déteste), Donald Trump a sans doute vu passer l’enquête réalisée par la chaîne parlementaire C-SPAN. Et il n’a sans doute pas apprécié les résultats. Selon cette étude, publiée vendredi, les historiens classent Barack Obama au douzième rang des présidents américains, la meilleure performance depuis la neuvième place de Ronald Reagan en 1988. Dans trois catégories, Obama entre dans le top 10 : «quête d’une justice égale pour tous» (3e), «autorité morale» (7e) et «gestion économique» (8e). En revanche, il se classe parmi les derniers (39e sur 44) en matière de relations avec le Congrès et termine à une très moyenne 24e place en relations internationales. A en croire cette étude, les trois meilleurs présidents de l’histoire se nomment Abraham Lincoln, George Washington et Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Vivement 2020 que Donald Trump fasse son entrée dans le classement.
Voir aussi:
Pour sa première conférence de presse, Trump fait du Trump !
VIDÉO. Le président élu, qui sera investi le 20 janvier, a répondu aux questions des journalistes. Et, comme souvent avec Donald Trump, c’était surréaliste.
Le Point.fr (avec AFP)
Il n’a pas changé ! Malgré l’élection, malgré les polémiques et malgré l’investiture qui approche, Donald Trump a livré une première conférence de presse hallucinante, loin de son discours de gagnant, en novembre, où il apparaissait apaisé. Des invectives, des effets de manche, des déclarations grandiloquentes, voire mégalo… Ce mercredi 11 janvier, le président élu a retrouvé ses accents de campagne. Il faut dire qu’il a dû répondre à une multitude de questions embarrassantes, sur la Russie, les informations compromettantes sorties le jour même, ses affaires et ses impôts… Donald Trump a répondu dans une ambiance tendue.Le milliardaire s’en est violemment pris aux médias qui ont publié la note confidentielle le mettant en cause, BuzzFeed, qualifié de poubelle, ou CNN, refusant de prendre la question de l’un de ses journalistes.
Parmi les déclarations les plus saillantes, Trump a reconnu que le piratage du camp démocrate pendant la campagne venait sans doute des Russes, mais a nommément mis en cause la Chine pour d’autres piratages. Il a affirmé qu’Obamacare serait abrogé et a redit que le fameux « mur » à la frontière mexicaine serait construit et payé par les Mexicains. Il a aussi officiellement passé le relais de son entreprise à ses fils, qui seront « virés » si, à l’issue de cette charge, ils ont failli.
Après une heure de conférence de presse, Donald Trump aura beaucoup esquivé. Et s’est montré finalement à peine plus disert que sur son canal de communication favori : son compte Twitter.
18 h 18 – Le message de Trump à ses fils
La première conférence de presse de Donald Trump est terminée. Il a montré de la main de nombreux documents entassés sur une table. « Ces papiers ne représentent qu’une partie de toutes les sociétés qui vont être accueillies dans le trust géré par mes fils. J’espère que je reviendrai pour leur dire qu’ils ont fait du bon boulot, sinon je leur dirai : Vous êtes virés. » Il quitte la scène, alors de nombreux journalistes tentent de poser leur question.
18 h 09 – Trump censure un journaliste de CNN
Donald Trump a refusé qu’un journaliste pose sa question, car son média « n’est pas digne » après avoir relayé des informations d’après lui « infondées ». « Vous vous taisez », lui lance-t-il. Le président élu s’en est ensuite pris aux médias, dont certains sont devenus spécialistes « en fake news (de fausses informations, NDLR) ». « Il faudra vivre avec ça », regrette-t-il.
18 h 03 – « Ce mur, on va le construire »
« Nous allons commencer tout de suite. Je n’ai pas envie d’attendre un an ou un an et demi. (…) Le Mexique remboursera le paiement du mur », explique Donald Trump, qui répète à plusieurs reprises qu’il ne souhaite pas attendre. « Ce mur, on va le construire », ajoute-t-il. « Le Mexique profite des États-Unis », lâche Trump, qui annonce que ce temps-là est terminé.
17 h 58 – « Faire disparaître Obamacare, un grand service pour les Américains »
« Obamacare est un désastre, une catastrophe pure et simple », explique Donald Trump en réponse à une question d’un journaliste sur l’Obamacare. « On va faire disparaître Obamacare, c’est un grand service que nous allons rendre aux Américains. Nous allons avoir un système de santé beaucoup moins cher et meilleur », signale-t-il.
17 h 56 – Trump veut de meilleurs accords commerciaux
« Ce que je cherche dans ce gouvernement, c’est à avoir les meilleurs, parce qu’on est à la traîne, on ne signe plus de bons accords commerciaux », déclare Donald Trump. Il annonce que les entreprises américaines qui délocalisent leurs emplois vont payer « une lourde taxe frontalière ».
17 h 53 – L’avocate de Donald Trump s’exprime
Sheri Dillon, l’avocate de Donald Trump, est montée sur scène pour détailler l’organisation du groupe Trump. Donald Trump va se consacrer à « rendre leur grandeur aux États-Unis » et va donc abandonner « tous ses postes au sein des entités liées au groupe Trump ».
17 h 50 – Trump veut combattre les délocalisations dans l’industrie pharmaceutique
« Nous devons faire revenir notre industrie pharmaceutique. Notre industrie pharmaceutique est un désastre », a déclaré le futur président américain lors de sa conférence de presse à New York. « Ils s’en vont de tous les côtés. Ils nous fournissent des médicaments, mais ils ne les produisent pas ici, en grande partie », a-t-il dit, ajoutant que ce secteur avait « beaucoup de lobbyistes et de pouvoir ». « Nous sommes les plus grands acheteurs de médicaments au monde et nous n’avons pas de bonnes procédures d’appels d’offres », a affirmé le président élu, assurant que cette stratégie permettra d’économiser « des milliards de dollars ».
17 h 39 – Polémique sur ses impôts : « Ça n’intéresse que les journalistes »
Donald Trump affirme avoir refusé des contrats avec Dubaï pour plus de deux milliards de dollars pour un week-end. Il dit aussi avoir cédé son empire à ses deux fils Eric et Donald Jr alors qu’il aurait pu, selon lui, rester à sa tête. Il a également expliqué que la polémique sur ses impôts n’intéressait pas les Américains, mais seulement les journalistes.
17 h 30 – Sextape : « Qui peut croire des choses pareilles ? »
Donald Trump a assuré mercredi à New York que les notes des renseignements faisant état de dossiers russes le compromettant étaient une « chose inventée » (sic) par ses adversaires. Il a estimé que c’était « une honte » que ces documents aient été divulgués par des médias qu’il a jugés irresponsables. Il a notamment qualifié Buzzfeed de « tas d’ordures sur le déclin ».
Il a longuement expliqué aussi qu’il savait être prudent dans les hôtels où l’on peut toujours être filmé et a conseillé à quiconque d’en faire autant. Enfin, faisant allusion aux « golden showers » auxquelles il se livrerait dans une sextape détenue par les Russes, il a rétorqué : « Je déteste les microbes. »
LIRE aussi Un magazine porno propose 1 million de dollars pour la sextape de Trump
Sur ses relations avec la Russie, « si Poutine aime Donald Trump, je trouve que c’est plutôt une bonne chose », lance le président élu, répondant à la question d’un journaliste qui demande si Poutine a joué un rôle dans son élection. « Le piratage, je pense que c’étaient les Russes », annonce-t-il alors qu’il est interrogé sur le piratage du Parti démocrate durant la campagne. « Mais je pense aussi que nous avons été piratés par d’autres pays et d’autres gens », dit-il en citant nommément la Chine. Il a également indiqué que la Russie allait jouer un rôle dans la lutte contre l’État islamique.
17 h 28 – « Je vais être le plus grand producteur d’emplois que Dieu ait jamais créé »
Donald Trump reprend une formule qu’il a déjà évoquée durant la campagne présidentielle. « Je vais créer de l’emploi, je vais être le plus grand producteur d’emplois que Dieu ait jamais créé. Je crois que nous allons faire un excellent travail », signale-t-il, mettant en avant la décision de plusieurs constructeurs automobiles comme Ford.
17 h 19 – Donald Trump : « Ces choses-là n’auraient jamais dû être écrites »
« Je suis ravi d’être parmi vous », a-t-il commencé. Il attaque les médias qui ont diffusé des « informations infondées« . « Ces choses-là n’auraient jamais dû être écrites. Elles n’auraient jamais dû être diffusées », explique-t-il tout en saluant certains médias qui ne les ont pas relayées. « Je respecte les médias et la liberté d’expression », dit-il.
17 h 14 – Donald Trump est arrivé
Donald Trump est entouré de sa fille et de son gendre, nommé à la Maison-Blanche. Son vice-président Mike Pence a pris la parole. Ce sera ensuite au tour du président élu de faire son discours.
Voir enfin:
Moby: ses révélations fracassantes sur Donald Trump
Jean Delterme
Le Figaro
18/02/2017
Le DJ star new-yorkais et fervent militant anti-Trump a révélé le 14 février dernier détenir des informations compromettantes sur l’actuel président des États-Unis. Dans une longue lettre ouverte publiée sur Instagram, il annonce, entre autres, une éventuelle guerre contre l’Iran.
C’est définitivement une mauvaise semaine pour Donald Trump. Son conseiller à la sécurité nationale démissionne, le New York Times dénonce son rapprochement avec les renseignements russes avant son élection et désormais, le chanteur Moby se réinvente en lanceur d’alerte pour divulguer des informations extrêmement compromettantes sur le président des États-Unis.
Après avoir séjourné le week-end dernier chez des amis proches de la sphère politique, à Washington D.C, Moby affirme ainsi avoir appris «de sources sûres» que certaines des pires rumeurs circulant sur le nouveau locataire de la Maison Blanche pourraient se révéler exactes…
En cinq points, résumés en quelques lignes sur son compte Instagram, l’artiste enchaîne les révélations sans mâcher ses mots. Premier impact: «Le dossier russe sur Trump est 100% vrai. Le gouvernement russe le fait chanter, pas seulement parce qu’il s’est fait pisser dessus par des prostituées russes, mais pour des faits bien plus abominables».
Le Kremlin est également au cœur d’une autre révélation de Moby, qui éclaire d’un jour nouveau la démission récente de son conseiller à la sécurité nationale, Michael Flynn: «Depuis le premier jour, l’administration Trump est de connivence avec le gouvernement russe«, déclare le chanteur. «Cela se confirme avec la démission de son conseiller en sécurité nationale, coupable d’avoir entretenu des relations étroites avec l’ambassadeur russe à Washington.»
Le troisième point évoqué par le DJ est peut-être le plus inquiétant. Il évoque la volonté supposée de Washington de s’engager dans une guerre ouverte avec l’Iran. D’après Moby, «l’administration Trump a besoin d’une guerre, plus précisément avec l’Iran. Elle place des navires de guerre américains au large des côtes iraniennes dans l’espoir que l’Iran attaque l’un d’entre eux et donne ainsi un prétexte pour les envahir».
Un complot international à l’œuvre?
Le fervent militant anti-Trump, qui avait refusé de chanter à l’investiture présidentielle, ne s’arrête pas là. Selon lui, la droite américaine élaborerait à l’heure actuelle une stratégie pour se débarrasser de Donald Trump. Un véritable complot ourdi par le parti républicain et les Koch Brothers, puissants industriels conservateurs.
Enfin, ultime pied de nez à Donald Trump, le chanteur révèle l’opinion désastreuse qu’ont les services secrets du nouveau président des États-Unis: «Les services de renseignement dans le monde entier et aux États-Unis sont horrifiés par l’incompétence de l’administration Trump et se préparent à révéler des informations qui mèneront à des évictions au plus haut niveau et finalement à l’impeachment».
La conclusion de cette lettre coup de poing a valeur d’avertissement: «J’écris tout cela car, quand tout cela se produira, vous pourrez dire que vous l’aviez déjà lu», écrit ainsi Moby. «Nous vivons une époque terrifiante dans laquelle notre président incompétent est aux mains d’un pouvoir étranger».
Voir enfin:
Vous aussi, apprenez à parler comme Emmanuel Macron
« Prédicateur, apôtre de la ‘bienveillance’, les bras en croix, il motive ses ouailles à se dépasser, s’engager dans la voie d’un salut individuel et collectif à coup d’injonctions aussi vagues que séduisantes. »
En une tournure typiquement macronienne, il vous exhorte ainsi à « faire votre propre introspection pour faire bouger les lignes ». Lui-même est un born-again. Il a connu une rénovation spirituelle. C’est fort triste, mais Emmanuel a autrefois « adhéré à des corporations, des gens qui avaient un intérêt à préserver ». Il le faisait « en toute bonne foi », sans réaliser qu’il contribuait « un peu à étouffer le pays ». Avec lui, vous en avez tiré une leçon : soyons charitables avec nos frères qui n’ont pas encore vu la lumière (la « lueur d’espérance », dit-il). Ne les sifflons pas !
La « bienveillance », voilà le maître mot de votre campagne législative. En effet, le succès de votre candidat tient, selon les commentateurs, à une certaine douceur, qui rassure et repose dans une élection par ailleurs belliqueuse. « En France, le candidat de la ‘rupture’ est souvent perçu comme brutal. Lui se présente comme tel, mais dans la bienveillance, souligne ainsi Christian Delporte, auteur d’une ‘Histoire de la langue de bois’ (Flammarion, 2009). Il utilise des émotions apaisantes, les mots de la béatitude. »
Quant au paradis promis à vos électeurs, il porte bien sûr le doux nom de « progrès ». Dans un souci de transparence, votre leader a même explicité cette ficelle rhétorique dans son livre :
« Le sentiment du progrès établit un horizon psychologique, créant cette conviction intime que, si l’on y travaille, la vie sera peut-être meilleure pour soi demain. »
Pour créer un effet de contraste, il est utile de dépeindre, avec un frisson contenu, ce « basculement », cette « grande transformation » que nous vivons, uniquement comparable à « l’invention de l’imprimerie » ou à la « découverte du continent américain ». Pas de messianisme sans perspective prochaine de l’Apocalypse.
Règle n°2 : maîtrisez le baratin pseudo-profond
Notre conseil : il va vous falloir maîtriser ce « baratin pseudo-profond » que l’on qualifiait autrefois de langue de bois et qui se veut désormais dénué de toute idéologie. On y entre comme dans un bain chaud, avec plaisir et volupté. C’est une forme de ciment du discours. Un vrai art du remplissage.
Lorsque que l’on vous demandera quelles sont vos priorités en politique étrangère, n’hésitez pas à déclarer fortement :
« La politique internationale que je veux conduire pour notre émancipation vraie et donc pour notre sécurité, c’est celle qui respectera l’équilibre, qui préservera l’indépendance française, qui assurera la stabilité des Etats et qui, partout, défendra nos valeurs et nos principes. »
Si l’on insiste, répondez qu’il faut « intervenir avec intelligence », que le « dialogue doit être exigeant » et que, « aussi longtemps que la diplomatie permet d’empêcher la guerre, elle est préférable ».
Il est bien sûr indispensable d’engager « une réforme juste, en profondeur, de l’hôpital ». Comment ? Par « une réorganisation responsable » et en « agissant davantage avec le terrain, avec les acteurs eux-mêmes ». Il faut rappeler que « le numérique a ceci de particulier qu’il permet le meilleur comme le pire ». Que l’on est souvent le « fruit de son histoire ». Que « nous sommes plongés dans le monde qu’on le veuille ou non ». Qu’il faudrait « que nous puissions convenir ensemble qu’un peu de réalisme est nécessaire ». Que « pour agir efficacement, il faut avant tout être lucide ».
N’hésitez pas à saupoudrer tout cela de « clarté » et « d’exigence » (sans modération) mais aussi de « profond » et d' »intime ». Privilégiez l’expression « regarder en face » (le « monde », le « système », « la réalité ») qui diffuse immédiatement une impression de vérité vraie. Si un trou de mémoire vous assaille, reposez-vous sur le classique et toujours très utile : « C’est un défi collectif que nous allons conduire en responsabilité. »
Malheureusement, le journaliste Vincent Glad a percé à jour toute la force de cette stratégie : « Emmanuel Macron ne peut avoir tort, car il ne dit rien qui puisse être contredit. » Et Christian Delporte de renchérir :
« C’est une manière de s’exprimer qui rappelle la campagne de Tony Blair, en Grande-Bretagne. On l’appelait aussi le candidat du flou (« Tony Blur »). Enoncer des lieux communs permet à chacun de comprendre ce qu’il a envie de comprendre. Tout cela est très fluide et offre donc peu de prises à ses adversaires, au-delà du ‘ »ah, mais vous n’avez pas de programme !' »
Bien sûr, vous pouvez répondre à ces esprits médisants que « parce que l’action est complexe et le terrain d’application multiple, l’action politique doit se discuter, s’amender, se corriger, se décliner au niveau le plus adapté ». Ainsi, si vous restez flou, c’est parce que votre action sera une « délibération permanente ».
Règle n°3 : apprenez à parler le « faux cash »
Notre conseil : le « baratin pseudo-profond » finit par lasser l’oreille. Il faut donc enfoncer des portes ouvertes, mais veiller à ce que ça claque bien.
Le problème, c’est que les médias se lassent. L’explication de la complexité dans un réseau d’interdépendances, ça leur va deux minutes, mais ça ne rentre pas dans un bandeau télé. Alors, de temps en temps, il faut mimer la casse de la baraque. S’indigner que « parfois, dans le débat public français, on ne peut même plus nommer le réel ». C’est le « faux cash ».
« Il y a un mot qu’on ne veut plus dire, c’est le mot de ‘paysan' », ose ainsi courageusement votre candidat à Quimper. A Clermont-Ferrand, il préfère « appeler un chat un chat » et parler de « pauvres ». En d’autres occasions, il rappelle à toute fin utile que le mot « solidarité » n’est « pas un gros mot » (de même que « ambition »). Ou que celui de laïcité n’est pas « ringard ». Et que « la République », ce « n’est pas un mot qu’on envoie à la figure des gens comme un sel qui ne sale plus ».
Vous avez pigé l’idée. Vous n’êtes pas dans le secret du Dieu, mais vous vous doutez que certaines de ces saillies (les « illettrés » de Gad, l' »alcoolisme » dans le Nord) sont calculées. Vous êtes bien d’accord avec Christian Delporte pour qui « Emmanuel Macron est suffisamment fin et intelligent pour ne pas faire deux fois la même maladresse de communication ».
Car ce « faux parler cash » est bien pratique pour peaufiner votre image anti-système. Si on vous tombe dessus, c’est parce que votre histoire « dérange ». Il permet de donner du clinquant à du terne. De parler de « révolution » en prônant des idées aussi iconoclastes — prenons l’exemple de la santé — qu’un grand plan de prévention dans la médecine, une évaluation du tiers payant généralisé (oui, Emmanuel Macron n’a pas peur de froisser des cibles électorales en proposant de « demander une évaluation » : « Je dis toujours la même chose à tout le monde. Ça m’a parfois valu beaucoup d’ennuis, mais à la fin c’est plus simple »), l’ouverture du numerus clausus, la vente à l’unité de médicaments et le développement de la télémédecine. Des mesures terrifiantes d’audace.
Si quelqu’un ose vous taquiner, répondez que, m’enfin, certaines des mesures proposées (transparence, baisse du « coût du travail », priorité à la formation, individualisation des parcours, accords d’entreprise pour retrouver de la « souplesse ») sont en contradiction flagrante avec l’esprit de l’époque !
Règle n°4 : appliquez la trame du pragmatisme flou
Notre conseil : la gauche et la droite, ça ne veut plus rien dire. Il y a désormais les progressistes (c’est vous) et les conservateurs passéistes (les autres). Les progressistes voient loin, ils détestent le court-terme et « l’entêtement de l’idéologue ». Ils sont pour « avancer » sans « a priori ».
Le « faux parler cash » s’accompagne d’un supposé pragmatisme (le « bon sens », dit même votre candidat). Voici une trame à adapter en fonction des sujets :
- Il y a d’abord « l’opposition épouvantail » (« J’ai toujours été mal à l’aise avec le débat qui oppose les partisans de la ‘relance’ à ceux de la ‘rigueur’. » « La solution au chômage d’aujourd’hui, ce n’est pas la suppression des droits des travailleurs. De la même façon, ce n’est pas la préservation de notre modèle ») ;
- puis le « décalage millénariste » (« Une nouvelle fois, nous passons largement à côté des vrais problèmes. » « Les sujets fondamentaux sont ailleurs. » « C’est un débat perdant perdant ») ;
- suivi de la « réconciliation des contraires » (« Poursuivre les nécessaires économies, sans réduire en rien l’accès aux soins. » « Deux piliers, d’égale ambition : investissement public dans des domaines clés et baisse durable des dépenses courantes ») ;
- qui débouche sur « l’appel au terrain » (il faut bien sûr « généraliser » les expériences réussies, donner plus d’ »autonomie » aux acteurs qui vivent au plus près « ces réalités »).
Si vous craignez qu’on vous accuse d’être un panier percé, précisez que tout cela ne passera pas par des dépenses en plus, mais bien par une « refondation », une « réorientation », une « ré-attribution de certains mécanismes ». Mais pour que tout cela ait quand même l’air de casser la baraque, ajoutez à la fin de la phrase : « C’est une révolution culturelle. »
Règle n°5 : filez la métaphore du mouvement
Notre conseil : vous êtes le parti du mouvement. Vous êtes même un mouvement du mouvement. Tout doit bouger. La géographie, les classes sociales. Truffez votre discours de métaphores filées : le bien est du côté du fluide ; le mal, du stagnant. En tout domaine.
« Cette vague, ce n’est pas une bulle », a précisé votre candidat à propos de votre mouvement, soulignant par là sa maîtrise du vocabulaire hydrique. Il est vrai qu’il a tendance à souvent prendre la mer. A « fixer un cap ». A entreprendre une « Odyssée ». A constater que « le bateau est chaque jour plus grand », ce qui relève du miracle ou d’une innovation technique encore peu connue. D’autant que « la quille » de ce navire, c’est la « confluence » des « engagés et des courageux » ce qui laisse songeur sur sa stabilité.
Ici, la métaphore de l’eau s’accommode de celle du mouvement qui sous-tend la verve macronienne : le progrès est du côté du « fluide », de ce « monde de mouvement perpétuel », contre les « blocages », les « rigidités », les « barrières », les « statuts », la « ligne Maginot », les « protections », les « situations acquises », la France qui « stagne » et le très mystérieux « immobilisme relatif ». Vous en avez toute une liste dans un carnet.
Peut-être, vous dites-vous, faut-il y chercher un écho lointain au saint-simonisme dont se réclame plusieurs de ses sympathisants (l’économiste Jean-Marc Daniel, le maire de Lyon Gérard Collomb). Socialiste des premiers âges, Saint-Simon défendait l’industrialisme contre le parasitisme féodal, comme aujourd’hui Macron défend « les outsiders » et « ceux qui font » contre « les insiders« , protégés par les statuts et les privilèges. Passionné par les canaux, Saint-Simon avait lui aussi tendance à considérer le corps social à l’aune de la mécanique des fluides.
Ses disciples (car le saint-simonisme devint aussi une quasi religion) se chargèrent de faciliter la circulation du corps social en construisant des chemins de fer. Emmanuel Macron préfère les bus et la fibre optique. Cohérent, il n’a pas créé un parti mais un « mouvement » qui « marche », sorte de mobilité au carré.
Cécile Alduy :
« Il a ainsi inauguré la candidature ‘méta-politique’, somme de commentaires sur le processus de sa candidature, et non sur son contenu ou son positionnement idéologique. »
Votre candidat ne s’en cache pas puisqu’il vous demandera à « chaque instant » de « réinventer ce projet », ce qui peut vite devenir difficile à suivre. Tout cela vous permettra en tout cas d’adopter une pureté du discours : « liberté », « autonomie » et « mobilité ». Et surtout, un enthousiasme vitaliste : les lignes bougent ! Les choses avancent ! Nous allons déborder le Vieux Monde !
Règle n°6 : valorisez « l’énergie » de vos disciples
Notre conseil : lorsque que vos ouailles vous regarderont avec les yeux de Chimène, penchez-vous doucement vers eux et répétez que vous n’avez qu’un seul souhait, qu’une seule ligne directrice, « libérer leur énergie ». C’est très pratique car ça ne veut rien dire et que chacun y met ce qu’il veut y voir.
Attention, Emmanuel Macron n’est pas l’homme providentiel. Non, non. Ce qui compte, c’est le projet, la démarche, vous, nous et tous ceux qui le veulent. Lui ne fait que vous proposer un « grand récit ». Il le disait déjà en 2011 :
« Le politique n’est plus celui qui doit proposer seulement des mesures ou un programme. Il doit définir une vision de la société, des principes de gouvernement qui doivent ensuite être débattus. »
Ainsi, comme le souligne Cécile Alduy, « il se construit une figure paradoxale de leader messianique qui redonne (en apparence) l’initiative aux citoyens dans une ‘démarche’ participative (là aussi en apparence) ». « En apparence », car il ne peut s’empêcher de se comparer à Jeanne d’Arc (qui « fend le système ») ou de citer le général de Gaulle à chaque discours (parfois même pour se moquer de ceux… qui s’en réclament).
Pour Cécile Alduy, s’il y a une comparaison à faire, elle est sûrement à chercher du côté de Steve Jobs, l’ancien patron d’Apple :
« Chaque réunion publique est guettée par les médias car elle révélera une facette inédite, tenue secrète longtemps et indéfiniment annoncée, du ‘produit’ fini (ici le programme), qui est toujours en projet, fruit d’ajustements en fonction du marché politique et des « feedbacks » de clients/électeurs sur les phases bêta. »
En public, la langue macronienne est peu technocratique : l’expérience utilisateur a été finement travaillée en amont, notamment par le traitement automatisé de langage, pour que tout paraisse simple et fluide. Comme c’était le cas lors des « keynotes » de la marque à la pomme, le charisme du gourou se mêle à l’énergie des fans : si vous m’adulez, c’est parce que je vous permets de vivre plus intensément. Pour bien comprendre cette alchimie, peut-être faut-il passer par l’un des mots préférés de Macron : « l’énergie ».
Celle-ci se transmute en une sorte de substance mystique, réponse à tous les enjeux. Forme de toile vierge sur laquelle chacun peut projeter ses propres fantasmes. L’énergie peut être « libérée », « additionnée », « rassemblée », conjuguée ». Elle peut « monter », « se déployer ». Elle « donne de la force ». Elle est plurielle. Elle est singulière. Elle est « en chacune et chacun d’entre nous ». Lorsque tout va mal, elle peut être « bloquée », « assignée à résidence ». Il faut alors la faire « émerger », lui « donner une place ».
Lorsque l’on vous titillera sur votre absence de programme, vous n’aurez donc qu’à répondre que c’est le « devoir de la politique de permettre à cette énergie enfin de s’exprimer ». Ainsi, vous ne croyez pas « au fait d’égrener des propositions dans le cadre d’une campagne ». Ça devrait passer, comme le souligne Christian Delporte :
When he makes claims like this, the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally. Salena Zito
Les journalistes prennent toujours Trump au pied de la lettre mais sans le prendre au sérieux. Ses électeurs, en revanche, le prennent au sérieux mais ne le prennent pas au pied de la lettre. Par exemple, quand il propose de construire un mur à la frontière mexicaine, les journalistes exigent des détails, veulent savoir comment il va s’y prendre. Ses électeurs comprennent qu’il ne veut pas vraiment édifier un mur. Ils entendent simplement qu’il propose une politique migratoire plus saine et plus intelligente. Peter Thiel
I expected some broken dishes, some firings, some chaos, and some rookie mistakes. We got all of that. But I also expect a systems-thinker to tame the chaos over time as he learns on the job. For example, the leaks will stop as soon as Trump fires the right people. He’ll figure out which meetings he can skip. He’ll know who to trust. He’ll learn where all the buttons and levers are. It’s a process. If you are comparing the incoming Trump administration to the smooth transfer of power that defines our modern history, that’s an irrational comparison. If the country wanted a smooth ride it would have elected Hillary Clinton. Instead, voters opted to “drain the swamp.“ And you can’t drain the swamp without angering the alligators and getting some swamp water on your pants. That’s what we’re watching now. My liberal friends are gleefully scouring the semi-fake news and sending me articles that show Trump is “incompetent.” That’s the new narrative on the left. The Hitler illusion is starting to fade because Trump refuses to build concentration camps as his critics hallucinated he would. And Israel likes Trump, which is making the Hitler illusion harder to maintain. So the critics are evolving their main line of attack from Hitler to “incompetent,” with a dash of “chaos.” You’ll see those two words all over the Opposition Media’s coverage. It isn’t a coincidence. Persuasion-wise, focusing on incompetence and chaos is a strong play by the anti-Trumpers. One would expect the new Trump administration to have lots of growing pains. That means the Opposition Media will have plenty of fodder that they can frame as incompetence and chaos. Confirmation bias will make it all seem to fit the narrative. This is the same persuasion play that Trump used when he assigned to his opponents nicknames such as Lyin’ Ted and Crooked Hillary. He depended on future news cycles to serve up lots of confirmation bias to make his labels more credible over time. Trump’s opposition is running the same persuasion play on him. Now everything he does will be seen through their frame of “incompetence” and “chaos.” Even if it isn’t. That is strong persuasion. If you step out of the Opposition Media’s framing of Trump, another frame that fits the data is that he’s learning on the job, just like he learned every other field that he entered and eventually mastered. I don’t know what you expected when Trump went to Washington, but it isn’t too different from what I imagined. I assumed there would be broken dishes. And I assumed it would take him months to get his systems in place. When I worked in corporate America, I was usually involved in setting goals for the department. When we didn’t meet those goals, I always pointed out that the problem could be on either end. Either the goals were unrealistic or the performance was bad. Both explanations fits the data. Likewise, Trump’s first few weeks do look exactly like “incompetence” and “chaos” if you are primed to see it that way. But they also look like a systems-thinker simultaneously draining the swamp and learning on the job. Scott Adams
We live in our own personal movies. This is a perfect example. Millions of Americans looked at the same press conference and half of us came away thinking we saw an entirely different movie than the other half. Many of us saw Trump talking the way he normally does, and saying the things he normally says. Other people saw a raving lunatic, melting down. Those are not the same movies. So how can we know who is hallucinating in this case? The best way to tell is by looking for the trigger for cognitive dissonance. In this case, the trigger is clear. Trump’s unexpected win forced the Huffington Post to rewrite their mental movies from one in which they were extra-clever writers to one in which they were the dumbest political observers in the entire solar system. You might recall that the Huffington Post made a big deal of refusing to cover Trump on their political pages when he first announced his candidacy. They only carried him on their entertainment pages because they were so smart they knew he could not win. Then he won. When reality violates your ego that rudely, you either have to rewrite the movie in your head to recast yourself as an idiot, or you rewrite the movie to make yourself the hero who could see what others missed. Apparently the Huffington Post chose to rewrite their movie so Trump is a deranged monster, just like they warned us. That’s what they see. This isn’t an example of so-called “fake” news as we generally understand it. This is literally imaginary news. I believe the Huffington Post’s description of the press conference is literally what they saw. If you gave them lie detector tests, they would swear they saw a meltdown, and the lie detector would say they were telling the truth. There are two clues that the Huffington Post is hallucinating and I’m not. The first clue is that they have a trigger and I don’t. Reality violated their egos, whereas I was predicting a Trump win all along. My world has been consistent with my ego. No trigger. All I have is a warm feeling of rightness. The second clue is that the Huffington Post is seeing something that half the country doesn’t see. As a general rule, the person who sees the elephant in the room is the one hallucinating, not the one who can’t see the elephant. The Huffington Post is literally seeing something that is invisible to me and other observers. We see a President Trump talking the way he normally talks. They see a 77-minute meltdown. Scott Adams
Buried deep beneath the Michael Flynn hysteria this week was Judicial Watch’s release of newly obtained State Department documents related to the Benghazi terrorist attack on September 11, 2012. One email confirms—again—that the Obama administration knew the day after the attack it was not a random act of violence stemming from an anti-Muslim video. That was the excuse shamefully propagated by top Obama administration officials (including the president himself) and swallowed whole by a media establishment desperate to help Obama win re-election six weeks later. According to the summary of a call on September 12, 2012 between State Department Under-Secretary Patrick Kennedy and several congressional staffers, Kennedy was asked if the attack came under cover of protest: “No this was a direct breaching attack,” he answered. Kennedy also denied the attack was coordinated with the protests in Cairo over the video: “Attack in Cairo was a demonstration. There were no weapons shown or used. A few cans of spray paint.”It’s somewhat ironic—galling?—that this email was disclosed the same day the anti-Trump universe was spinning into the stratosphere over Flynn’s resignation as President Trump’s national security advisor. It begs for a little trip down memory lane, to a kinder, gentler time when the media gave a great big pass to another national security advisor in the days after four Americans, including an ambassador, were murdered in Libya by Islamic terrorists under her watch. Fun fact: While Trump press secretary Sean Spicer fielded 55 questions on February 14 related to the Flynn debacle, Obama’s press secretary Jay Carney received only 13 questions from reporters on September 12, 2012, three of which were set-ups to blast Mitt Romney’s criticism of the administration after the attack. 55 to 13. So as we now suffer through yet another patch of media mania, conspiracy theories, and unsubstantiated claims about how Trump hearts Russia, as well as the daily beatings endured by Spicer, let’s reminisce to when the media and Obama’s press flaks spun, deflected—even joked about golf and “Saturday Night Live!”—less than a week after Benghazi. (…) But of course nothing matches the audacity of trope by Obama’s National Security Advisor Susan Rice on September 16, 2012. Rice went on several Sunday shows to peddle a story she knew was completely phony, one that was already quickly unraveling even as most in the media and administration tried to keep it intact. (…) In a press gaggle on Air Force One the next day, guess how many times Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest was asked about Rice’s comments? Ten? Five? One? Not once. Let me repeat that. The day after Obama’s national security advisor was on five news programs to blame a terrorist attack on a YouTube video, not one reporter asked the White House about it. I actually had to re-read the transcripts several times, even checking the date over and over, to make sure this was accurate. Her name did not even come up. (…) Sometimes the hypocrisy, double standard, and outright lies by the media under the Trump presidency is funny. Sometimes it is infuriating. But never was the media’s complicit sheep-like coverage more evident than in the days after Benghazi, behavior you can never imagine now. They have yet to admit their mistakes and failures, even as more evidence is revealed. Remember that the next time you want to worry about how Trump is responsible for undermining the media’s integrity and credibility. Julie Kelly
Trump thrives despite, not because of, his crudity, and largely because of anger at Barack Obama’s divisive and polarizing governance and sermonizing — and the Republican party’s habitual consideration of trade issues, debt, immigration, and education largely from the vantage point of either abstraction or privilege. Victor Davis Hanson
Democrats would seed the summer and autumn election battlefields with new and updated models of politically correct IEDs. They used this technique very effectively in 2012 to render a decent Mitt Romney as a tax-cheating, greedy Wall Street vulture, who ignored his regular garbageman, beat up kids in prep school, and strapped his terrified dog to his car top. Four years earlier the Democrats had blown John McCain to smithereens and left him little more than a closet racist and an adulterous and senile coot, who could not remember how many estates he owned nor the shenanigans of his pill-popping spouse. To avoid the rain of shrapnel, Romney had to battle both the moderator and his opponent in a presidential debate while contextualizing his own personal success and fortune. McCain, meanwhile, swore off referring to the racist personal pastor of Barack Obama and to Obama’s own litany of “typical white person” and “get in their face.” We forget that long before the wild man Trump, the most un-Trumpian, sober and judicious McCain and Romney were flattened by bogus charges against their spouses and false claims, respectively, of adultery and tax-cheating — and were completely unable to defend themselves from such smears and slanders. Instead of staying on a winning message and avoiding the subterranean traps, Trump on cue tramped right through this progressive minefield. The explosive result was predictable. He wasted precious hours rudely taking on a Mexican-American judge — who, to be fair, had foolishly joined a “La Raza” lawyers’ organization (imagine a white counterpart as a member of a local legal organization with “The Race” in its name) — or jousting with a Gold Star family, indifferent to the fact that the father was an immigration lawyer who logically would oppose Trump’s immigration moratoria. So when all these mines went off, Trump in theory always had some sort of legitimate counter-argument: Yes, Megyn Kelly was not commensurate in her sexism questions, in that she did not ask Hillary Clinton to account for her own sexist past, whether laughing over aspects of a case involving a rapist client, or demonizing Bill’s victims of coerced sex. And, yes, it was also a fact that bombastically inviting Putin to find Hillary’s missing 30,000 e-mails could not be a breach of security if they were truly about yoga and Chelsea’s wedding. Victor Davis Hanson
Any Republican has a difficult pathway to the presidency. On the electoral map, expanding blue blobs in coastal and big-city America swamp the conservative geographical sea of red. Big-electoral-vote states such as California, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey are utterly lost before the campaign even begins. The media have devolved into a weird Ministry of Truth. News seems defined now as what information is necessary to release to arrive at correct views. In recent elections, centrists, like John McCain and Mitt Romney – once found useful by the media when running against more-conservative Republicans — were reinvented as caricatures of Potterville scoundrels right out of a Frank Capra movie. When the media got through with a good man like McCain, he was left an adulterous, confused septuagenarian, unsure of how many mansions he owned, and a likely closeted bigot. Another gentleman like Romney was reduced to a comic-book Ri¢hie Ri¢h, who owned an elevator, never talked to his garbage man, hazed innocents in prep school, and tortured his dog on the roof of his car. If it were a choice between shouting down debate moderator Candy Crowley and shaming her unprofessionalism, or allowing her to hijack the debate, Romney in Ajaxian style (“nobly live, or nobly die”) chose the decorous path of dignified abdication. In contrast, we were to believe Obama’s adolescent faux Greek columns, hokey “lowering the seas and cooling the planet,” vero possumus seal on his podium as president-elect, and 57 states were Lincolnesque. Why would 2016 not end up again in losing nobly? Would once again campaigning under the Marquess of Queensberry rules win Republicans a Munich reprieve? The Orangeman Cometh In such a hysterical landscape, it was possible that no traditional Republican in 2016 was likely to win, even against a flawed candidate like Hillary Clinton, who emerged wounded from a bruising primary win over aged socialist Bernie Sanders. Then came along the Trump, the seducer of the Right when the Republican establishment was busy early on coronating Jeb Bush. After the cuckolded front-runners imploded, we all assumed that Trump’s successful primary victories — oddly predicated on avoidance of a ground game, internal polling, ad campaigns, sophisticated fundraising, and a sea of consultants and handlers — were hardly applicable to Clinton, Inc. She surely would bury him under a sea of cash, consultants, and sheer manpower. That Trump was an amateur, a cad, his own worst enemy, cynically leveraging a new business or brand, and at any time could say anything was supposedly confirmation of Hillary’s inevitable victory. Her winning paradigm was seen as simply anti-Trump rather than pro-Hillary: light campaigning to conserve her disguised fragile health, while giving full media attention to allow Trump to elucidate his fully obnoxious self. Her campaign was to be a series of self-important selfies, each more flattering to the beholder but otherwise of no interest to her reluctant supporters. For insurance, Clinton would enlist the bipartisan highbrow Washington establishment to close ranks, with their habitual tsk-tsking of Trump in a nuanced historical context — “Hitler,” “Stalin,” “Mussolini,” “brown shirt,” etc. For all Hillary’s hundreds of millions of corporate dollars and legions of Clinton Foundation strategists, she could never quite shake Trump, who at 70 seemed more like a frenzied 55. Hillary would rely on the old Obama team of progressive hit men in the public-employee unions, the news ministries, the pajama-boy bloggers, the race industry, and the open-borders lobbies to brand Trump supporters as racist, sexist, misogynist, Islamophobic, nativist, homophobic. The shades of Obama’s old white reprehensible “Clingers” would spring back to life as “The Deplorables.” Yet for all Hillary’s hundreds of millions of corporate dollars and legions of Clinton Foundation strategists, she could never quite shake Trump, who at 70 seemed more like a frenzied 55. Trump at his worst was never put away by Hillary at her best, and he has stayed within six to eight points for most of his awful August and is now nipping her heels as October nears. Fracking Populist Fury Trump’s hare-and-tortoise strategy, his mishmash politics, reinventions, mastery of free publicity, and El Jefe celebrity had always offered him an outside chance of winning. (…) Trump’s electoral calculus was easy to fathom. He needed to win as many independents as Romney, enthuse some new Reagan Democrats to return to politics, keep steady the Republican establishment, and win at least as much of the Latino and black vote as had the underperforming McCain and Romney — all to win seven or eight swing states. He planned to do that, in addition to not stepping on IEDs, through the simple enough strategy of an outraged outsider not nibbling, but blasting away, at political correctness, reminding audiences that he was not a traditional conservative, but certainly more conservative than Hillary, and a roguish celebrity billionaire with a propensity to talk with, not down to, the lower middle classes. That the establishment was repulsed by his carroty look, his past scheming, his Queens-accented bombast, and his nationalist policies only made him seem more authentic to his supporters, old and possibly new as well. In sum, if Trump’s D-11 bulldozer blade did not exist, it would have to be invented. He is Obama’s nemesis, Hillary’s worst nightmare, and a vampire’s mirror of the Republican establishment. Before November’s election, his next outburst or reinvention will once again sorely embarrass his supporters, but perhaps not to the degree that Clinton’s erudite callousness should repel her own. Victor Davis Hanson
In his energetic harnessing of popular anger, Trump, my own least favorite in the field, was the more effective candidate in gauging the mood of the times. These are all valid rejoinders to those who say that recalcitrant conservatives, independents, and women should not hold their nose and vote for Trump. But they are not the chief considerations in his favor. Something has gone terribly wrong with the Republican party, and it has nothing to do with the flaws of Donald Trump. Something like his tone and message would have to be invented if he did not exist. None of the other 16 primary candidates — the great majority of whom had far greater political expertise, more even temperaments, and more knowledge of issues than did Trump — shared Trump’s sense of outrage — or his ability to convey it — over what was wrong: The lives and concerns of the Republican establishment in the media and government no longer resembled those of half their supporters. The Beltway establishment grew more concerned about their sinecures in government and the media than about showing urgency in stopping Obamaism. When the Voz de Aztlan and the Wall Street Journal often share the same position on illegal immigration, or when Republicans of the Gang of Eight are as likely as their left-wing associates to disparage those who want federal immigration law enforced, the proverbial conservative masses feel they have lost their representation. How, under a supposedly obstructive, conservative-controlled House and Senate, did we reach $20 trillion in debt, institutionalize sanctuary cities, and put ourselves on track to a Navy of World War I size? Compared with all that, “making Mexico pay” for the wall does not seem all that radical. Under a Trump presidency the owner of Univision would not be stealthily writing, as he did to Team Clinton, to press harder for open borders — and thus the continuance of a permanent and profitable viewership of non-English speakers. Trump’s outrageousness was not really new; it was more a 360-degree mirror of an already outrageous politics as usual. One does not need lectures about conservatism from Edmund Burke when, at the neighborhood school, English becomes a second language, or when one is rammed by a hit-and-run driver illegally in the United States who flees the scene of the accident. Do our elites ever enter their offices to find their opinion-journalism jobs outsourced at half the cost to writers in India? Are congressional staffers told to move to Alabama, where it is cheaper to telecommunicate their business? Trump’s outrageousness was not really new; it was more a 360-degree mirror of an already outrageous politics as usual. (…) The problem, however, is that a displaced real person, unemployed and living with his 80-year-old grandmother in a financially underwater and unsellable home, cannot easily move to the North Dakota fracking fields, any more than the destruction of an 80-acre small-farming operation owing to foreign agricultural subsidies is in any way “creative.” What we needed from our conservative elites and moderates was not necessarily less free-market economics, but fair in addition to free trade — and at least some compassion and sensitivity in recognizing that their bromides usually applied to others rather than to themselves and the political class of both parties. When Trump shoots off his blunderbuss, is it always proof of laziness and ignorance, or is it sometimes generally aimed in the right direction to prompt anxiety and eventual necessary reconsideration? Questioning NATO’s pro forma way of doing business led to furor, but also to renewed promises from NATO allies to fight terror, pony up defense funds, and coordinate more effectively. Deploring unfair trade deals suddenly made Hillary Clinton renounce her prior zealous support of the “gold standard” Trans-Pacific Partnership deal.(…) Many of us did not vote in the primaries for Trump, because we did not believe that he was sufficiently conservative or, given his polarizing demeanor, that he could win the presidency even if he were. The irony is now upon us that Trump may have been the most conservative Republican candidate who still could beat Hillary Clinton — and that if he were to win, he might usher in the most conservative Congress, presidency, and Supreme Court in nearly a century. Victor Davis Hanson