In a conversation with Greg Sargent
of the New Republic published [yesterday], writer Amanda
Marcotte called out an important moment in White House press secretary Karoline
Leavitt’s first press conference yesterday.
When a reporter noted that “[e]gg
prices have skyrocketed since President Trump took office,” and asked, “what
specifically is he doing to lower those costs for Americans?” Leavitt answered:
“Really glad you brought this up because there is a lot of reporting out there
that is putting the onus on this White House for the increased cost of eggs.
I would like to point out to each
and every one of you that in 2024, when Joe Biden was in the Oval Office or
upstairs in the residence sleeping, I’m not so sure, egg prices increased 65
percent in this country. We also have seen the cost of everything—not just
eggs—bacon, groceries, gasoline, have increased because of the inflationary
policies of the last administration.”
During his campaign for the
presidency, Trump repeatedly attacked Biden for the post-pandemic inflation
that afflicted the country and promised to bring down “the price of
everything.” Even before he took office, Trump had begun to walk back his
promise, and J.D. Vance has also suggested price relief would “take a little
bit of time.”
Now coffee and egg prices are at an
all-time high, and the administration’s solution is to attack Biden. No matter
the incompetencies of the Trump presidency, Marcotte notes, it appears the
answer will be: You might not like what we’re doing, but don’t you hate
Democrats more?
President Richard Nixon’s team
pioneered this strategy before the 1970 midterm elections to rally wavering
Republicans around the president’s party. Nixon had won election with a promise
that he would end the war in Vietnam honorably, but had, in fact, increased the
U.S. presence there.
By the end of 1969, with opposition
mounting, he insisted that a “silent majority” agreed with his Vietnam
policies. Then, at the end of April 1970, he told the American people that he
had sent ground troops into Vietnam’s neighbor Cambodia. Protests led to the
killing of four college students at Ohio’s Kent State University. Members of
Nixon’s key demographic, middle-class white Americans, threatened to abandon
him.
Nixon’s advisors urged him to win
his voters back by attacking their opponents as lazy, dangerous, and
un-American. They called their strategy “positive polarization” because it
stoked the anger, they needed voters to feel in order to show up to vote, a development
they saw as positive.
Patrick Buchanan wrote a memo to
Nixon urging him to take much stronger control over the nation, to manipulate
the media, and to go to war with his opponents, whom he considered
illegitimate, warning: “[W]e are in a contest over the soul of the country now
and the decision will not be some middle compromise—it will be their kind of
society or ours.”
Nixon so internalized this advice
that by 1972 he was willing to sabotage his Democratic opponent’s campaign in
order to win, convinced that a Democratic victory would destroy America.
He ended up having to resign when
his participation in covering up the bugging of the Democratic National
Convention’s headquarters at the Watergate Hotel surfaced, but in his 1980
presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan picked up the rhetorical technique of
dividing the country in two.
In part, that depended on
constructing a false world, claiming when challenged on his stories of
government mismanagement that a “liberal media” was determined to undermine
him. When voters elected him, Reagan began the dismantling of the post–World
War II government that protected equality before the law, equal access to
resources, and the right to have a say in government.
Whenever it seemed that voters were
turning against the Republicans’ policies, which moved $50 trillion from the
bottom 90% to the top 1% between 1981 and 2021, Republicans doubled down on the
idea that popular government programs were “socialist” or “Marxist,” designed
to redistribute wealth from hardworking Americans to undeserving “liberals.”
By 2020, accompanying that rhetoric
with voter suppression and a flood of money into Republican election war chests
had made many Republican voters loyal to the party above the country. So
convinced were they that the government was corrupt and that they were fighting
a war for America that they were willing to die of Covid in order to “own the
Libs.” And in 2021 they tried to overturn democracy in order to keep their
leader in power.
Now, in 2025, the impulse simply to
hurt Democrats no matter how badly such actions would hurt the country showed
in a social media post today by Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) that the Senate
should confirm Trump’s deeply problematic nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. because
“no Cabinet nominee could damage the political future of Democrats more than
RFK.”
Kennedy is before the Senate
Finance Committee today in confirmation hearings to head the Department of
Health and Human Services, which oversees the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, and the Food and Drug Administration, among other agencies.
Kennedy is a conspiracy theorist
who opposes the vaccines that have slashed deadly illnesses in the U.S. and has attacked the institutions he would oversee; more than 18,000 physicians
have signed a letter opposing his confirmation.
Yesterday, Kennedy’s cousin,
Caroline Kennedy, broke her silence about him to write an open letter to
senators. She warned that he “lacks any relevant government, financial,
management, or medical experience” and, calling him a “predator,” warned that
he has “gone on to misrepresent, lie and cheat his way through life.”
Forcing the Republican agenda by
continuing to portray political opponents as dangerous to America because of
wasteful spending and misguided priorities has reached cartoonish extremes.
Trump has nonsensically claimed that thanks to him, the U.S. military has
“TURNED ON THE WATER” in California, apparently misunderstanding that the Army
Corps of Engineers had conducted maintenance on federal water pumps for three
days and turned them back on when the maintenance was complete.
Yesterday, Leavitt claimed that the
Trump administration tried to stop all foreign aid because Biden supposedly
sent $50 million of condoms to Gaza and that the administration was just
focusing on being “good stewards of tax dollars.” The story is simply false.
The U.S. Agency for International Development spent about $7 million on condoms
in 2023, the vast majority of which went to Africa through anti-AIDS programs;
Trump’s first administration made similar investments.
At the same time, they are
portraying Democrats as wasteful and misguided, Trump and MAGA Republicans are
claiming Democratic accomplishments for themselves. Last night, Trump claimed
he had “just asked Elon Musk and [SpaceX] to ‘go get’ the 2 brave astronauts
who have been virtually abandoned in space by the Biden Administration,” and
Musk chipped in that it was “[t]errible that the Biden administration left them
there so long.”
In fact, as fact-checkers quickly
noted, NASA says the astronauts whose damaged spaceship has returned to Earth
are not stuck in space but are staffing the space station, and that a SpaceX
capsule has been docked at the station since September in an arrangement made
by the Biden administration to bring them back to Earth as soon as a new crew
arrives.
True MAGA is buying the lies the
administration is selling—Fox News Channel pundit Jesse Watters suggested
Gazans were using condoms as balloons to float explosives into Israel—but it is
possible Nixon’s system of polarization is reaching the end of its rope.
Key to Trump’s 2024 win was his
insistence that violent crime was skyrocketing in the U.S.—in fact, it was
plummeting—and he vowed to deport “criminal” migrants. Since he took office, a
number of made-for-television sweeps have tried to demonstrate that he is
making America safer.
But his commutations and pardons of
all the January 6 rioters convicted of crimes has made that a hard sell,
especially as one is now wanted for soliciting sex with a minor and another has
been killed by Indiana police for resisting arrest. In addition, Aaron
Reichlin-Melnick of the American Immigration Council notes that Trump officials
ordered prosecutors to divert resources away from truly dangerous drug
traffickers to go after undocumented immigrants.
Those who believed Trump would not
come for anyone, but “criminals” are learning otherwise: NBC News reported on
Monday that nearly half the migrants arrested in a Chicago sweep on Sunday
either had nonviolent offenses or had committed no offense.
While the Trump administration
defends its sweeps by saying it considers anyone who has broken immigration law
to be a criminal, being undocumented is in fact a civil offense, not a crime,
and many of Trump’s supporters did not think he would make such general sweeps.
But the biggest wake-up call for
those embracing the longtime language of polarization is that when Trump on
Tuesday shut down all federal funding and grants to stop what he called the
“Marxist” diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives of the government, he
was attacking virtually all Americans.
The administration’s pause of all
federal funding and grants until it could make sure “DEI” had been purged out
of them cut everything from Meals on Wheels, a food delivery program for
shut-ins, to education, local law enforcement, and the Medicaid on which
programs for the elderly depend.
The outcry was so strong that today
the Office of Management and Budget issued a memo to rescind its previous memo
freezing all federal programs. But Leavitt immediately contradicted the
apparent content of the new memo, saying the cuts were still in effect. Judd
Legum of Popular Information noted that the plan seemed to be
“to create as much chaos as possible.”
That chaos keeps attention on the
administration, and it appeared to be a way for the White House to upend
lawsuits against the freeze. So far, that has not worked. U.S. District Judge
John McConnell said he was inclined to grant a restraining order, noting that
“the administration is acting with a distinction without a difference.”
The Trump administration’s cutting
of the federal funding on which Americans depend in the name of opposition to
“Marxism” and “DEI” contrasts spectacularly with its embrace of the world’s
richest man, Elon Musk; the billionaires in Trump’s Cabinet; and the
billionaires who have poured money into the Trump administration.
CNN’s Chris Isidore notes that government subsidies built Musk’s fortune and that he continues to receive government contracts worth billions of dollars. In addition to government contracts, Trump’s tax policy favors the very rich. On Monday, January 27, the Senate confirmed Trump’s nominee billionaire Scott Bessent for Treasury secretary.
In his confirmation hearings, Bessent told the Senate that he
believes extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts is “the single most important
economic issue of the day…. If we do not fix these tax cuts, if we do not renew
and extend, then we will be facing an economic calamity.”
Republicans identify the rapidly
growing federal deficit as a crisis for which Democrats are to blame, but in
fact, President Bill Clinton—with an assist from Republican president George
H.W. Bush—eliminated the federal deficit in the 1990s.
What threw the deficit into the red
was the tax cuts and unfunded wars under George W. Bush, along with Trump’s
2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, or TCJA, that disproportionately benefited the very
wealthy and corporations. The U.S. Treasury estimates that extending the TCJA
as is—Trump has mused on deeper cuts—would cost $4.2 trillion over the next ten
years.
Slashing the federal funding that
supports ordinary Americans will make it easier to fund federal contracts and
further tax cuts for the wealthy. With that tradeoff so visible in 2025, will
“owning the Libs” still be worth it?
Trump seemed to be worried that it
might not be. This afternoon he threw red meat directly at the MAGA base with
an announcement that he would be signing an executive order to open a
30,000-person-capacity migrant detention center at Guantanamo Bay to “detain
the worst criminal illegal aliens threatening the American people.”
—Heather Cox Richardson
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