WEDNESDAY, NOV 25, 2015 04:00 AM CST
The Donald can’t be derailed: The bigot and congenital liar can say whatever he wants, and it makes no difference
Trump is unlike any political candidate in modern American history. It's past time the press treat him accordingly VIDEO
This article originally appeared on Media Matters.
It was dĂ©jĂ vu all over again recently when some in the press rushed to announce that current events suddenly threatened to derail Donald Trump’s unorthodox campaign.
The first supposed hurdle came in the form of Trump’s bizarre, 95-minute rant in Iowa where he belittled and insulted one of his opponents, Ben Carson. The New York Times reported, “some Republicans believe that his scathing attacks on Mr. Carson — and voters who support him — will backfire.” The Boston Globe highlighted“some observers” who argued that “Trump may have finally gone too far, hurting his standing at the top of most polls and also adding to worries among Republicans about their field this season.”
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Then in the wake of the Paris terror attack, The Wall Street Journal suggested the killings, “could shake up the 2016 presidential race, reminding voters of the high stakes and potentially boosting candidates who put their governing experience front and center.”
The Times twice last week stressed that GOP voters might turn away from Trump in favor of “more sober-minded candidates”; that they’ll take “a more sober measure of who is prepared to serve as commander in chief.”
Sober-minded candidates? Have these people been watching the spectacle that is the Republican campaign season for the last six months?
There was no backlash — quite the opposite. Trump and his xenophobic campaign continue to soar in the GOP polls as he unfurls an endless stream of outrageous proposals. (Bring back U.S.-sanctioned torture! The government needs to close down some American mosques!)
Fact: Trump really has emerged as the perfect Fox News era candidate. He’s a bigoted nativist. And he’s a bullying, congenital liar who wallows in misinformation. In the process, he’s winning over the demagoguery wing of the Republican Party that’s been feasting off far-right media hate rhetoric for years.
Now, by successfully neutralizing enough members of the press, Trump’s created space for himself to maneuver while espousing jaw-dropping rhetoric that in the past would have been considered disqualifying for any candidate.
So yes, of course Trump can win the nomination, partly because he embodies today’s Republican Party, as reimagined through the intolerant lens of Fox News.
After months and months of predicting the “beginning of the end” of Trump’s run, the press ought to forthrightly concede he could represent the GOP next November, while at the same time aggressively chronicle the unprecedented extremism that’s propelling his run.
Instead, the campaign press today seems poorly equipped to handle what’s happening to the Republican Party, and especially over the last ten days since the Paris attack. That signature press timidity seems to spring from a larger reluctance to face the reality of today’s GOP.
Desperate to keep alive a long-outdated, asymmetrical model that suggests partisan battles in Washington, D.C., are fought between center-left Democrats and center-right Republicans, the press simply doesn’t want to acknowledge the GOP’s radical right turn. But it’s that defining lurch that’s opened the door for a possible Trump win.
Meaning, you can’t understand Trump’s surge without understanding that the GOP has dismantled the guardrails; that it’s now anything goes.
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