Trump’s Acceptance Speech Was A Eulogy For The GOP
CLEVELAND
– A great darkness has descended on America. Poverty and violence
increase across the land. Armed gangs roam the streets. Illegal
immigrants pour across cross our borders. Some of them harbor wicked
schemes. Others simply want to steal American jobs.
Overseas, death and destruction reign. The long shadow of ISIS
spreads across the Middle East. Iran marshals its strength and hatches
plots. Civil war rages in Syria, chaos rules in Iraq and Libya. America
has abandoned her allies. Her name has become a byword among the
nations.
That’s the picture Donald Trump painted in his acceptance speech
Thursday night at the Republican National Convention. It was cartoonish
and Nixonian, and it will likely be remembered as a kind of eulogy for
the GOP.
But for the occasion of his coronation as leader of a doomed
political party, it was entirely appropriate. After all, Trump has
tapped into the anger and frustration of so many Americans in part by
exaggerating their problems and the troubles facing America.
His acceptance speech, like much of his primary campaign, was an
extended warning of the terrors and deprivations to come if Hillary
Clinton wins the White House. On immigration, America will see “mass
amnesty, mass immigration, and mass lawlessness” under Clinton. “Her
plan will overwhelm your schools and hospitals, further reduce your jobs
and wages, and make it harder for recent immigrants to escape from
poverty,” he said. On trade and foreign policy, Clinton will bring
“death, destruction and weakness.”
Especially on trade, to listen to Trump one would think globalization
had laid waste the American economy. That NAFTA was “one of the worst
economic deals ever made by our country.” That the Trans-Pacific
Partnership “will not only destroy our manufacturing, but it will make
America subject to the rulings of foreign governments.”
In his speech, Trump boasted of his VP pick, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence,
promising to bring “the same economic success to America that Mike
brought to Indiana.” The irony of course is that Indiana owes much of
its recent economic success to free trade. What Indiana in particular
doesn’t need are protectionist trade policies that will hurt its
manufacturing and exports.
But those are just details, and not everyone pays attention to them.
But most Americans do sense that their country has problems. At home and
abroad, eight years of the Obama administration have stunted economic
growth, eroded the rule of law, and made the world more dangerous and
less stable.
Many people feel they’re worse off now than they were a decade ago,
even if they’re not. So when Trump says, as he did Thursday night, that
“decades of record immigration have produced lower wages and higher
unemployment for our citizens, especially for African-American and
Latino workers,” it feels true, even though it’s not.
But when Trump says we face “poverty and violence at home, war and
destruction abroad,” it resonates. When he claims “Not only have our
citizens endured domestic disaster, but they have lived through one
international humiliation after another,” that also rings kind of true.
The question for the country is, what do we do about it? What
principles will guide us? What policies should we adopt? More to the
point: who will lead us, who can unite us, and who can we trust?
Can we trust Trump? His speech Thursday night was riddled with errors
of fact —a speech that promised to “present the facts plainly and
honestly.”
Can Trump unite us? The GOP convention this week was marked above all by schism and heavy-handed attempts to crush dissent among conservative delegates.
As for who will lead the Republican Party, that’s been decided. At
one point Thursday night, Trump said to scattered laughter, “No one
knows the system better than me, which is why I alone can fix it.” But
he wasn’t kidding.
No comments