The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Trump vs Democracy: Two Historians’ Perspectives
Episode Date: November 7, 2024This is an episode we think you’d enjoy of On with Kara Swisher. President-elect Donald J. Trump has won a resounding victory against Vice President Kamala Harris, and now, the man who promised po...litical retribution and said he may use the military to go after “the enemy within” is headed back to the White House. Only this time, there will be no guardrails — only enablers. In order to understand the threat Trump poses to our democracy, Kara talks to two historians who know a lot about the birth of American democracy and the last time we came close to losing it: Dr. Lindsay Chervinsky and Dr. Timothy Naftali. Chervinsky is a presidential historian and the executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library. Her newest book is Making the Presidency, John Adams and the Precedents that Forged the Republic. Naftali is a senior research scholar in the Faculty of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University and the former director of the federal Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram/TikTok as @onwithkaraswisher You can listen to more of this podcast by searching for On with Kara Swisher in your podcast app. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to another episode of the Prop G Pod. In place of our regularly scheduled programming,
we're sharing an episode of On with Kara Swisher. She's this journalist, nice lady,
nice lady. Kara is the co-host of Pivot and twice a week Kara interviews power players
across industries including business tech, media and politics. Kara does get,
Kara has kind of the deepest
Rolodex in the world, literally.
In this episode that we're sharing today,
Kara speaks to historians Lindsay Shervinsky
and Tim Naftali.
Lindsay is the executive director of the
George Washington Presidential Library
and Timothy is the former director of the
Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.
I know that sounds like a fucking snoozefest.
It's actually quite interesting.
They discuss the birth of American democracy,
the structural weaknesses in our system,
Trump's authoritarian tendencies,
and whether or not American democracy could survive
another Trump presidency.
I like Kara's interviews because she knows when to interrupt,
she knows when to let them run.
She tries to set people up for success,
but she's absolutely not scared to push back on them, which I like. I'm often self-conscious whenever we do an interview
together because it's just every time I finish an interview with Kara, I think she's just
better at this. And interviewing is a vastly underrated skill. You don't very rarely do
you say, wow, that was a great moderator, that was a great interviewer. It's whether
you liked the person being interviewed and she's very good at it. Anyways, enough of
that. Here's the episode.
Hi everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher. My guests today are Dr. Lindsay Trevinsky and Dr. Timothy
Naftali, two historians who will help us put the re-election of Donald J. Trump into historical
context and understand if and how American democracy will stand up to his obvious authoritarian
impulses. If you're anything like me, you're feeling,
look, badly today. And you should. Let yourself feel badly. It's okay. Secondly, get up after
you feel badly because there's a lot of work to do. Thirdly, he is a terrible person and
half of our country voted for him knowing that. But it's also important to step back
and take the long view with two historians who will
help you see this moment with a little more clarity and perhaps make you feel better.
Maybe not, but at least we can try.
Lindsay is a presidential historian and the executive director of the George Washington
Presidential Library.
And her newest book is Making the Presidency, John Adams and the Precedents that Forged
the Republic, but she's written extensively about our first president and probably our best one, George Washington.
Tim is a senior research scholar in the faculty of international and public affairs at Columbia
University and the former director of the federal Richard Nixon Presidential Library
and Museum. He is the author, co-author, or editor of eight books. Our expert question
comes from Bill Adair, the creator of PolitiFact and author of Beyond the Big Lie, and a professor
of journalism and public policy at Duke. Let's get to it. Lindsay and Tim, thank you for being on On.
Pleasure.
Thank you so much for having us.
A long time listener, first time caller.
Former President Donald Trump is now President-elect Donald Trump.
He won a surprisingly resounding victory.
His Republican Party won the Senate and we are still waiting for the results from the
House, but the GOP has a good chance of holding it.
We'll see.
We're taping this on Wednesday, November 6th, the morning after the election, and I wanted
to start by getting your initial reactions to Trump's victory, Lindsay, and then Tim.
I am surprised.
I'm really surprised.
I think that I have to completely rethink everything I knew about how elections work
and what matters. Um, I also think that at this moment,
I feel like I need to rethink my general optimism about the world and
democracy and the American people.
But I also recognize that there's a lot we don't know yet in terms of how people
actually made decisions and why they made decisions.
So I'm trying to leave space for learning, but mostly I'm just really, really surprised.
Okay, just be clear, it's half the American people.
Just saying that about half the American people.
I guess I'm shocked that what blows me away
is that 2016, a lot of people, I think,
didn't have a sense of who he was,
but now more people have voted for the explicit cruelty
and veniality, and that feels like a very intentional choice.
Absolutely. Tim?
I wasn't as surprised because I had sadly come to the understanding that January 6th didn't matter for half the country.
And for me as a historian and citizen, that was the hardest realization that at the very least,
being guilty of dereliction of duty on that day wasn't enough to disqualify someone from
national leadership. You could have a disagreement as to whether he criminally provoked January 6,
but there's absolutely no doubt the evidence is overwhelming that he did nothing. And the idea that someone like that could be elevated again to national
leadership is very, very difficult to swallow. And that became clear to me when it was so close.
The fact that Donald Trump remained not just a viable candidate, but a powerful and successful candidate on the national level,
what told us a lot about ourselves. And so I'm afraid as a result, I grasped for myself the fact
that Donald Trump had been normalized by enough of the country that he could win. And the fact that Donald Trump had been normalized by enough of the country that
he could win and the fact that he was normalized tells us something about
ourselves. So we're gonna bounce back and forth between the founding of the
country, the Nixon era, and the present. Washington helped create our democracy,
Nixon certainly damaged it, and the question for today is how will democracy
weather a second Trump presidency? Lindsay, you've talked about the parallels between 1790s and today.
Back then, they also saw threat of political violence, contested elections, foreign interference
in our elections, just different foreign interferers.
The questions over who belonged as a citizen, this has been an ongoing situation in our
country forever, pretty much.
Walk us through some of the parallels and the key differences.
Well, as you said, there are so many parallels.
Many of the challenges that we face in this current moment and we have faced in previous
iterations of American life existed in the 1790s.
Weak political parties, really intense partisanship, foreign interference in elections, questions about citizenship
and who belongs, xenophobia, legislation that tackles citizenship and freedom of speech,
political violence, actual political violence and the threat of political violence, and
I think weak institutions. There have been times in American life where our institutions
have been quite strong in the 1790s because they were so new and they didn't have the long scope of decades and centuries of sort
of building them up. They were quite weak and fragile. So all of that sounds similar
to us and I think it should. What I see as the key difference is in the 1790s, there
was a shared sense by both parties, both the Democratic Republicans and the Federalists
that one misstep might cause the nation
to completely fall apart because it was so new
and it was so fragile.
And fragile.
And I think, yeah, and I think the difference is that
most of those people had skin in the game.
They had either literally fought in the revolution
to found the nation or they had participated
in the institutions, whether it be Congress or state legislatures. And so they knew how hard it was to build
something. They knew what fragile looked like. And I think the election of 1800, they were
all sort of chastened by how close it came to being completely blown apart. And as a
result, most people stepped back from the brink and stepped
back from some of that violence and attempted to build bridges. I think today we're complacent
because we think, oh, well, the country's been around for 200, however many years. Of
course it will continue, almost. Of course it will continue to survive. Of course it
will be fine because that's what it has always been.
But we know from looking at other nations, republics don't always survive.
They don't. In fact, they never do.
It's true. And the 300-year mark is usually a pretty good indicator of when things can
sometimes start to go sideways. So that is something to keep in mind.
So Trump has told his voters that he will be their retribution,
which is a very unusual word to use.
His campaign has promised mass deportation camps.
He said he will prosecute his political rivals,
and the voters rewarded him.
And he now has possibly the total power over all three branches, by the way.
Tim, there are other examples in our history
in presidential candidates campaigned as a strongman
and won a broad mandate of voters.
Has there been anyone else similar?
I've been thinking a little bit about the election of 1828,
simply because Andrew Jackson ran seeking vengeance.
He and his supporters believed they
had been deprived of the White House in 1824.
And much of his candidacy in the intervening four years was about removing John Quincy
Adams.
The difference is that Andrew Jackson wasn't seeking vengeance against half the country.
He was seeking vengeance largely against one man and those around that one man.
But he certainly presented himself as a strong man, though he wouldn't have used the term
dictatorship. But he intended to make the presidency a much more powerful instrument or
institution than it had been. He intended to veto things he did not agree with.
He believed himself to be on the same level as the Supreme Court in determining the constitutionality
of American laws. But again, there's a big difference. First of all, we're not talking
about the national security state of the 21st century.
The presidency, the executive branch is a much weaker, smaller branch, less pervasive
in our life than now.
Andrew Jackson was not seeking vengeance against whole classes of people. So we've had sort of a vengeful, successful candidate,
but I think that the consequences in this era are enormous and much bigger than they were long ago.
He did have vengeance against Native Americans and wouldn't fulfill laws that Supreme Court
even passed. He just declined to do so.
He declined it, but he didn't run for office.
He, this was a, this was an approach to people that he had before.
No, his particular treatment of Native Americans stands as one of the blots on our nation's history.
of Native Americans stands as one of the blots on our nation's history.
Um, Donald Trump has made it clear that, um, he doesn't want any guard rails that, uh, he doesn't intend to have establishment Republicans around him.
He doesn't intend to have, and this was not used by him, but by others, any
adults in the room to tell him what he cannot do. He's also
made clear that he wants to use the instruments of the federal government to hurt his enemies.
We are going to enter, at least if he does what he says he is going to do, another era of the enemies list, something
we have not actually experienced since the 1970s.
With a mandate of some sort, some kind of mandate.
So if we go back to our founding, President George Washington could have easily become
a monarch, as everybody knows and hears about, but instead he helped birth the first modern
democracy.
Talk about the opportunities Washington had to consolidate power around
himself and how he reacted to them, Lindsay, because he certainly had the ability to do
so.
Oh, he had an enormous ability. I mean, one of the real openings for his presidency was
that the Constitution is extraordinarily short, especially prior to our amendments. It was
only about 4,000 words. And Article 2, which controlled
the executive branch, was very, very short. And I think partly that was by design. The
delegates at the Constitutional Convention didn't really want to talk about the presidency
with Washington in the room. That would have been extremely uncomfortable. And they also
trusted him to make good decisions to establish precedents that would be wise and cautious for his successors.
And I think they also understood
that a certain amount of vagueness and silence
was required in order to give flexibility
to people once they were in office
to meet the challenges that could not
yet possibly be foreseen.
So much of the presidency wasn't defined.
And instead, Washington had to figure out how he interacted with other branches of government,
how he interacted with citizens, how he was supposed to govern in a crisis, whether it
be a foreign crisis or domestic insurrection.
All of those things are not really articulated in the Constitution and very little legislation.
And who were his intellectual and moral forces? What were the thinkers who molded him?
Well, he was largely self-taught. He had had a little bit of schooling, but he was largely self-taught.
And he did so by buying books throughout his entire life. So he read most of the Enlightenment tracks,
but I wouldn't necessarily think of him as an Enlightenment man like I would Thomas Jefferson, for example.
Instead I think he was largely shaped by his own experiences and his failures as a younger
man, his successes during the revolution.
And he brought that experience into his presidency with an understanding that he did not have
all the answers and that he had real weaknesses and there were things he didn't know.
And so as a result, he surrounded himself with people who had different types of expertise and knowledge,
and he listened to them. And so, we're talking about people like Alexander Hamilton and Thomas
Jefferson and Henry Knox and Edmund Randolph, which were his first administration. But he was
also close with John Jay, who was the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. And so he was actively
seeking out as much information as possible to try and form this office in a responsible
fashion.
All right. Let's fast forward. Richard Nixon believed that JFK and the Democrats had stolen
the election from him in 1960. And I just interviewed Chris Wallace and it looks like
he may have. So when he became president, it was time to run for reelection in 1972.
He was happy to play dirty
tricks in order to win. And it was his proclivity anyway. Talk about those two elections, 1960 and
72. Both were problematic for different reasons. How do you look at them? And are they speed bumps
on the road to democracy or are they signs our system wasn't as strong as we think?
as we think. Well, in 1960, John Kennedy was taking a risk.
The risk was whether the American people were ready to break that era's glass ceiling, which
was to elect a Catholic to the presidency.
And it was a tough election for him in many ways.
The Catholic issue weighed on him.
He lost a lot of votes for religious reasons.
And yes, we'll never quite know with certainty the shenanigans in Texas and the extent to which Democratic efforts in Chicago counterbalanced Republican
efforts in the south of the state. But what I think is important to understand about 60
is that there was a glass ceiling to break and it made that election much closer. Nixon's dirty tricks of the 72 campaign, um, were prefigured in his dirty tricks
against his opponents starting in 1971.
Um, and in many ways were prefigured in the dirty trick that he, uh, authored in
1968 to try to undermine the negotiations between the Johnson
administration and North Vietnam as a way to make the Vietnam war as
salient as possible in the election.
And in it, not exactly the same because it didn't involve covert actions in this
case, but the way in which Donald Trump undermined the possibility of some kind
of legislation regarding the border.
Nixon did not want the Vietnam situation to appear to be on the road to resolution in
68 because that was his strongest issue against,
at that point, his opponent, Vice President Hubert Humphrey.
What I wanted to mention about 60 that I think is so important is that
even though Kennedy's victory was narrow and even though Kennedy himself didn't feel he had a mandate,
which is one of the reasons why he nominated so many Republicans for his cabinet and for his inner circle. A whole generation of young Americans began to see him
as the personification of the White House. And John Kennedy would go to shape the way in which
people ran for the White House. And this was something that became a huge chip on Richard
Nixon's shoulders. Richard Nixon was not only angry because he felt
that the Kennedy money and the Kennedy allies
had deprived him of victory,
but there was something about the Kennedy charisma
that had free space in his brain.
And a lot of the Nixon administration, a lot of Nixon's own turmoil, inner turmoil, can
be explained as this inner debate between himself and the dead John F. Kennedy.
He never got over that.
Right.
So getting back to Donald Trump, in 2019 he tried to bully President Zelensky of Ukraine
into announcing investigation into his rival Joe Biden.
After he lost the 2020 election, he did everything he could to steal it, including calling the
secretary of state in Georgia and pressuring him to commit fraud and then sending a mob
to attack the Capitol on January 6th. I do blame him, even if you don't. How difficult
is the idea of free and fair elections with Trump in the Oval Office? I think people are
worried about that today. Already Lauren Boebert has said, let's do a third term. Lindsay and then Tim.
Well, I think that we have the infrastructure in place to have free and fair elections because
we have been having unbelievably free and fair elections. However, the part of this
that we don't know that's unprecedented is that a lot of this stuff just isn't tested.
A lot of the things that Trump could potentially do
kind of requires the honor system.
So for example, the Insurrection Act
gives the president enormous leeway
to call up the military to use in a domestic scene.
And so we don't know if in four years
he would call up the military under some false
pretense, and that could be challenged in court, but that takes a really long time and
we don't know how it would go.
And so our infrastructure is great.
It's just this question that so much of our system, especially the presidency—
What he could do, and he's a violator of norms.
Yes, absolutely.
And he's a reminder, I think, how much of it does require someone who's
generally acting in good faith.
Good faith. Tim, briefly.
My great concern is that Trump feels he was not successful at reshaping the presidency
in his first term. And that so many of our, most of our presidents, in fact,
until Trump, let the office shape them to some degree. Of course, they wanted to stamp it with
their imprint. You know, Dwight Eisenhower wanted to make sure that the floors were full of
cleat marks from his golf shoes, but they didn't ignore the norms of the office. They learned them and Trump ignored them.
And he is making clear, has made clear to us that he will define the interests of the United States
and that the office will be a means by which to achieve those personal interests. And John Bolton in his memoirs makes clear
that it wasn't just once, it wasn't just the Zelinsky call.
It was Trump's approach to foreign policy in general.
Whatever was good for him and good for the Trump business
was, by definition, good for the Trump business was by definition good for America. That is completely unique in our history.
And in terms of the threat to our constitution, we have to keep in mind
that we still have institutions and the US military hasn't been tested in this way, but we have to keep in mind that there are
many people with decades of training in the military and it would be very hard for Trump
to remove all of them and their lessons, what they have learned is that the military does not play a domestic police role
and that the military respects the Constitution
because their oath is to the Constitution,
it's not to any president.
So that would be severely tested.
We'll be back in a minute. ["Spring Day in the City"]
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Let's talk about wannabe authoritarians.
Let's talk about democratic norms around that.
Washington certainly, as we noted,
could have been an authoritarian if you wanted to.
Trump may become one.
This summer, the Supreme Court decided
the presidents
are essentially immune from prosecution for official acts.
Lindsay, you've written about how Washington used
the cabinet to strengthen a weak executive branch.
How do you think Washington reacts to a SCOTUS ruling
and the massive increase in executive power
since he was president?
Well, I think generally, if someone says to you,
the founders thought that, that is a red flag
that whatever they're gonna say next is full of crock
because the founders rarely agreed on anything
with perhaps one exception.
And that was we were not to have a king.
There is not supposed to be a king.
The president is supposed to be accountable to the law.
The president, once they leave office,
is a citizen just like anyone else.
And so while usually I'm sort of loathe to predict what they would think, I can be pretty
confident that they would be horrified at the notion that a president would not be held
accountable for their actions or would retain some sort of immune status once they stepped
down.
Okay.
So authoritans, by definition, try to consolidate power, the military, the media, et cetera.
Nixon abused the executive office for his own personal gain, by the way, the media, et cetera. Nixon repeatedly abused the executive office
for his own personal gain, by the way,
sometimes for unbelievably petty reasons.
Tim, walk us through some of his more egregious abuses
of power and why he was able to get away with them.
And after Watergate, there were a number of reforms passed
to place guardrails on the executive branch.
What were the consequential ones
and are they still effective today?
Well, Richard Nixon wanted to do much more damage than he was able to get away with. Let me give you
some examples. Richard Nixon had an intense fear of Jewish Americans and believed that there was
a conspiracy of Jewish Americans
in the federal government.
And he ordered the removal of Jewish Americans
from any position of great sensitivity
in the US government.
It's on tape.
It didn't happen.
And he was surrounded by some anti-Semites,
but there was a limit to what they were willing to do
to basically undermine the US government.
And so they satisfied him by moving around some Jewish Americans in an obscure part of
the Labor Department.
But it was a part of the Labor Department that is still, by the way, it's not the same
people of course, but still the source of, monthly unemployment figures, which are politically sensitive.
They were then they are now.
Um, Nixon wanted to do more, but then he moved on.
One of the things about Nixon is that he, um, he would vent, um, and sometimes it would
go away and he would not follow up and want something
done again.
And in other cases, he would keep pushing.
And there was a team around him that understood they could not implement everything that he
ordered.
On the tax issue, he vented and wanted to go after prominent Democrats and prominent
opponents of the war.
And fortunately for the country, the Republicans in the Treasury Department in the IRS wouldn't
do it.
But they had to stand up to Nixon and they were able to do it because the Secretary of
the Treasury, George Shultz, wouldn't let his people audit the three or four hundred names
that were given to them by the White House. Nixon got upset, but in the end he
decided it was too much of a problem for him to fire George Shultz and then he
got absorbed by Watergate. So we're relying in that regard on the kindness
of these people. More than the kindness, we're relying on the fact
that they were actually American patriots
and following the law.
Right, so Trump will have a team of sycophants
who will be ready to execute his whims every time.
That's my concern.
My great concern is that we not only have a president
who's promised us that he will build that kind of system,
but he now has a Supreme Court that has just
recognized the fact that there's presumptive immunity for official acts. And asking the
IRS to look into somebody's taxes could be viewed as an official act. The president could
say, well, I just thought they might be cheating on their taxes. There might be no evidence of it.
But my great concern in this next Trump administration
will be these abuses of power that Nixon did,
wanted to do on a grand scale, but didn't,
did it on a small scale because of guardrails.
And without those guardrails,
the president has enormous power to do damage.
So in 2020, Trump told General Mark Milley, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
to just shoot anti-racism protesters and to crack their skulls and beat the fuck out of them.
Luckily for the country, Milley did not comply in October.
Trump said this terrible thing during an interview with Maria Bartiroma, who is perfectly awful herself.
Let's hear it.
I think the bigger problem is the enemy from within. interview with Maria Bartiroma, who is perfectly awful herself. Let's hear it.
I think the bigger problem is the enemy from within. We have some very bad people. We have
some sick people, radical left lunatics. And I think they're the, and it should be very
easily handled by, if necessary, by national guard or if really necessary by the military,
because they can't let that happen.
Lindsay, put Trump's calls for turning the military against American citizens into historical
context for us.
Washington dealt with the whiskey rebellion in the 1790s when he mobilized American troops
against Americans to smother an insurgency and Hamilton was quite involved with that.
How does that compare to what we saw in 2020?
So there are attacks, Congress had passed a whiskey excise tax a couple of years previous
and there had been a number of protests and then they became violent.
A house was burned down that belonged to a federal tax collector and shots were exchanged.
There was an act that was passed in 1792 which gave the president the right to call up local
militias if Congress was out of session because Congress was out of session most of the year.
They were never around when anything interesting happened, and it took a really long time to
get them back into session.
So if there was an emergency, the president could submit evidence that immediate action
was required to a Supreme Court justice for approval.
Now Washington did try a number of peaceful methods to get this violent protest to disperse. That didn't work. He then called up the
militia and sent it out. He actually turned around, which was really important because he didn't want
to be seen as arresting his own citizens. Most of the protesters, the cases against them were
dismissed. Those that were convicted, he pardoned because it wasn't actually about the punishment.
It was about proving that the government had the right to actually pass a tax. I think what's really
important is over the course of American history, the military has at times been used in ways we
would be uncomfortable with, especially in the South to enforce slave codes, especially in the
wake of slave uprising. So it's not like we have a perfect history here.
We don't.
However, what strikes me about Trump's language
in that particular instance
is not necessarily the military part,
although that is quite important.
It's the enemy within.
It's drawing a distinction of American people
who deserve to be punished by the military.
And that is language that I know a lot of the other historians you've had on have demonstrated
that is language that authoritarian use as part of their playbook.
Right.
So authoritarian is oftentimes willing to use violence to maintain a grip on power.
In 1971, Nixon was battling a growing anti-war summit and in May of that year, he responded
to a huge protest with 10,000 federal troops and the largest mass arrests in US history.
A fake bomb was found under a bridge and Nixon mused he wished it would have been real because
it would have allowed him to respond even more forcefully.
Tim, what was Nixon's stance on using state force against Americans?
Did he ever seriously consider turning the military against fellow citizens?
Yes, he did. In fact, on the tapes, he ordered the use of violence
against the Native Americans at Wounded Knee.
Again, it was yet another Nixon order that was not
followed through by his people.
At one point, the Secretary of Defense
was ordered to attack these planes that were full of hostages in Jordan to end a
standoff with the People's Liberation Front for Palestine, the PFLP, and the Secretary of Defense
just didn't do it. I want to mention that Nixon's frustration with the guardrails around him were one of the reasons why he created an
investigative unit, the Plumbers in the White House. But he also okayed the payment to the
Teamsters to go out and break the bones of American anti-war demonstrators. They
didn't use the US military. They found another way of using violence. So Nixon
certainly not only conceived of the use of violence as appropriate, but in some
cases used it. Smaller scale, but it showed his capacity to do that.
But one thing about Nixon that isn't true about Trump,
Nixon had shame.
Nixon wanted to be remembered as a great president.
Nixon did not want to be remembered as someone
who had violated presidential norms.
He cared about them.
He just wanted to do it secretly.
It had to be done covertly.
With Donald Trump, we have someone who has no shame and doesn't care about presidential norms.
First of all, he doesn't know the history of the office, despite the fact having occupied it.
He doesn't care, which means that's a major problem because there are no self restraints.
Nixon, for all of his egregious behavior,
his criminal acts, his abuse of power, still had a sense that there were red lines, at least that
he didn't wish to cross overtly. Donald Trump knows no such red lines.
Right. So, Lindsay, one of our greatest national myths is the story of George Washington as Sherry
Treat and supposed inability to lie, which of course is a myth.
But were American politicians generally more truthful during his era and around that time?
Or is it an increasing level of dishonesty?
No, I mean, they got up to all sorts of no good and they would print just outrageous
lies in the newspaper.
In fact, you know, what I think is different about our news media ecosystem today is at the time, they had very intensely partisan newspapers.
There were the Democratic Republican papers and the Federalist papers.
The difference is that people understood that.
They understood that they were reading a partisan production.
They didn't have this idea that people on their television or people that are printing
things online were acting with the same sort of incentives as a Walter Cronkite. So it's actually like a media
literacy problem that I think that we have today that compares to the 1790s because they were happy
to just print garbage in the newspapers. But I want to pick up on that shame piece that Tim
mentioned because I think that that is actually a really important shift. It's not just that the president has to have shame. It's that our society has to have sort of an embrace of shame and a certain standard
of decorum norms and precedents that we all buy into because otherwise elections don't
work as an accountability mechanism if we are not willing to enforce those things. And
so certainly the norms and expectations about
social behavior were different in the 1790s, but there was still an agreed upon set of
social behavior. And that has evolved over time. What's different now is we seem to have
lost the ability to enforce it.
To enforce it.
Can I add?
I'm going to ask you specific questions actually. Authoritarians create an alternative reality.
They're followers.
In Trump's case, it's part of a strategy called Gish Gallup.
Steve Bannon calls it flood the zone with shit.
Trump also has an Elon Musk helping him spread propaganda widely and lies on X.
The social media platforms have abandoned content moderation, so they're just willing
enablers and not so active as Musk.
But it's easier than ever to sprint conspiracy theories. Nixon was an infamous liar. Give us some historical context for this seemingly unending stream of
untruths. Well, the interesting thing about the two eras of lying is that Nixon's lying was tethered
to some kind of reality. Nixon did not attempt to create a completely alternative reality.
Trump is inventing complete history and real, I mean, for example, to give a famous one,
not as important as some of the other examples, but when he talked about inflation, saying that
But when he talked about inflation, saying that in that inflation under Biden was the worst inflation we had ever had, uh, that is a, of course,
utter nonsense.
And when we had the inflation, the huge, much worse inflation of the
seventies, when he talked about Afghanistan, the pullout of Afghanistan,
which I think was, um, the debacle for the Biden administration, but he described
as the most embarrassing event
for America in its history. Well, that's utter nonsense. Both Lindsay and I and you two,
Kara, could come up with many more examples of much more embarrassing moments. So this is something
that Nixon had too much self-respect as a debater and as a policy intellectual to ever do. Right. What he would do is Nixon's deceit was calculated
to protect himself so the public didn't know him.
Trump's deceit is part of how the public knows him.
And as Lindsay said, we are in an era now
where the public doesn't mind embracing someone.
I'm talking about half the public, but enough.
Bracing someone they know is lying.
And the one thing I just wanted to add quickly was the shame issue isn't just important in
elections, it's important in impeachments.
And the assumption was that members, first of all,
they wouldn't be political parties. Lindsay knows this way better than I do, but the founders didn't
or framers didn't expect that. But more importantly, they thought that each member of Congress
would feel shame if they didn't defend the Constitution. And we live in an era now where the shame
is if you don't defend the president of your party.
Right.
And that vitiates, neutralizes completely
the sanction of impeachment or removal.
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So every episode we have a question from an outside expert.
Let's hear the one for you guys.
Hi, it's Bill Adair.
I'm the author of Beyond the Big Lie, a new book about lying and politics.
I'm also a professor of journalism at Duke University. Given each of your
backgrounds, I'm curious if George Washington and Richard Nixon were to meet for a beer today. What
would each of them say about the state of lying in politics? Go ahead, first you Lindsay and then
Tim. I think George Washington specifically would be horrified by it because while
his supporters often engaged in lies on his behalf, he really actually tried to stay above
that partisan fray. And so he would feel that it was a significant decline in our political culture.
I think Richard Nixon would consider Donald Trump an unintelligent man, but a very clever man and would be
envious of the media ecosystem in which Trump lives.
Richard Nixon felt that it was way too difficult for him
to spin his reality.
And he felt that the media, that there was no Fox News.
And he desperately wanted one.
In fact, some of his followers ultimately
created the alternative media environment in which Donald
Trump has been so successful.
Authoritarianists also try to encourage a cult of personality around them and Trump
inspires the most almost religious devotion among his devotees.
What does he do to create that reaction?
Are there other American presidents who are able to provoke such rabid loyalty among their
followers?
Well, there certainly have been presidents
who have been enormously popular.
FDR was enormously popular.
Reagan was enormously popular.
And Washington, to a certain extent,
I wouldn't necessarily call it a cult,
but he was seen as the father of the nation
and sort of put on this pedestal that was separate.
What I think Trump does is that he
has convinced a lot of people that whatever they're seeing
isn't happening.
What he says is what is happening.
And it starts to become a fulfilling prophecy because if they reject the things that they
previously believed, then that is a very uncomfortable feeling.
And so it's almost like a sunk cost fallacy where you can't acknowledge you were wrong
and you have to continue to lean all in to this process. So Nixon was also an insecure man but he wasn't
loved by the public but he retained support about one in four Americans even
after all the Watergate revelations came out and he was very uncharismatic but
how did he hold on to so many supporters and what does that tell us about Trump's
grip on his supporters' psyches? Well Nixon would love us about Trump's grip on his supporters' psyches? Well, Nixon would love to have Trump's grip on his supporters.
Two quick things.
One, Nixon didn't have coattails.
There were very few members of the Republican Party who owed their position to him.
And so he did not have followers in the Washington elite to the extent that Trump does, because
let's keep in mind the Washington elite is partly created by Trump.
The second thing is that Americans, while there were many that revered Nixon, he was
not beloved even by his own supporters.
They respected him.
And what happened was that respect depended on his ability to govern well too.
They didn't love him as a man.
And so once he began to lie to Americans, he undermined some of his own appeal to his base.
So his base shrank.
Trump's base never shrank to the extent that Nixon's did after Watergate.
One of the reasons why we had such a corrective moment is that not only did the Washington
elite reject Nixon, including of course Republicans, but the American people sought
a better government. And both Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter had public support for the new guardrails
that Congress created because of Nixon. So there wasn't that emotional attachment to Nixon that
Trump has engendered. And for that reason, the country, I would think, did not have the
corrective moment with the exception of one law regarding electoral think, did not have the corrective moment, with the exception
of one law regarding electoral counting, did not have the corrective moment after the first
Trump term that we saw in the 70s after both Watergate and Vietnam led to this effort to
try to restrain the imperial presidency.
And so right now, and there was also forgiveness after Andrew Johnson lost his reelection bid
to Ulysses S. Grant, he pardoned the Confederate leaders and generals who were meant to stand
trial for treason.
After Nixon resigned, President Gerald Ford pardoned him, much to his detriment.
Trump is going to essentially pardon himself when he fires Jack Smith.
He's pledged to go after political opponents.
A lot of people think he's bluffing, but we'll have to wait and see.
I don't think he's bluffing, but we'll have to wait and see. I don't think he's bluffing.
Is there any other example of this, of a president using his powers to go after rivals?
Nixon obviously tried it, and relative failure in that regard, but not a total failure.
Is there anyone else you can think of who's done this?
To a very small extent.
I mean, you know, Jefferson, when he was president, he hated Aaron Burr
because Aaron Burr had not stepped aside once the election was tied in 1800. He really didn't
like some of the Federalist Supreme Court justices. So he sort of encouraged an impeachment
and then sort of encouraged people to pursue charges against Burr for his conspiracy out
West. But also Hamilton, famous. Exactly. But he wasn't, it wasn't an explicit, you need to put this person in jail because
they're my enemy. It was they had done something that was appeared to be wrong. And he encouraged
the prosecution of it. But notably, he failed. He failed in both cases because the institutions
and the other people around him felt that the rule of law was more
important than this vendetta.
Two questions for both of you.
In his farewell address, Washington said that, quote, sooner or later, the chief of some
prevailing faction would manipulate the public's emotions and their partisan lawyers used to
quote the purposes of his own elevation on the runes of public liberty.
It's almost as if Trump or someone like him was inevitable and Washington knew that the political system he helped create had vulnerabilities
that could be exploited by a leader, really a grifter who puts himself above the interests
of the country. Is it capable of handling the stresses it now faces under Trump, first
Lindsay and then Tim?
I don't think we know. I mean, it was the first time, but I think the best way to think of guardrails is like
a car.
If you get into an accident and your airbags deploy, then they've saved you.
You might be bruised and battered, but then the car is totaled and you have to have it
fixed and it's not going to be able to save you in the same way.
And I think our guardrails have been bruised and battered or the airbags have been deployed.
And so I'm not sure.
I mean, what's notable after the Nixon moment
is that Congress did take action and did implement reforms.
And we have seen very few of them in the last four years.
And I fear that we are going to come to regret that.
Tim?
I agree with Lindsay.
I mean, one of the great concerns I have
is what a generation of young Americans
is learning about power and responsibility.
And the fact that Trump could come back after January 6
and his other abuses in the first term
is signaling to many that that is not only a useful and effective approach to leadership,
but it's a good approach to leadership because it's been it's now been sort of embraced by enough
of the country. To my mind, those are the norms that I worry most about. John F. Kennedy created, with all his flaws, an ideal of how one should run for office and how
one should act in office. Again, they didn't know fully what he was up to in office. I believe that
it is possible that Donald Trump will become that ideal for an entire generation of young Americans
who are striving for power. And that, to me, is what could undermine our institutions because it
takes more than just eight years to destroy institutions, but a generation can destroy
institutions.
Absolutely. So that brings me to my last question. Ever since Trump won in 2016, people have
debated whether he's a symptom or cause of the fear, division, anger, racism, and xenophobia
we see almost every day during
his campaign.
It was a dark vision of America, which it's been in our veins forever.
Let's be clear.
He's not a new thing.
Where do you come down, Lindsay?
And then, Tim, finish up.
I think that he let it come out of the shadows.
He made it permissible to speak a lot of these things out loud and that has therefore
accelerated the growth and the expanse of this wildfire of hate.
Kimberley Pfeiffer Tim?
Tim Weiss I think of Lady Bracknell in the importance of being earnest.
And in this case, I'm paraphrasing.
Kimberley Pfeiffer Oscar Wilde.
Tim Weiss Yes, Oscar Wilde.
Kimberley Pfeiffer But in this, to elect-
Kimberley Pfeiffer too much persecuted. Yes,
to elect Trump once is misfortune. To reelect Trump is carelessness. I think that this is on
the American people and I believe the world is looking at this now. The times that they said,
oh that's Trump being Trump. I think a lot of the world and a lot of many Americans are saying, no,
that's America being America.
I think we need to come to terms with things, uh, in the next little while
that, uh, we haven't come to terms with one, the effect of inequality on this
country, which has produced a populism that is both on the right and the left.
Two, the real deep effects of the pandemic.
that is both on the right and the left, two, the real deep effects of the pandemic, and three,
the very fact of the consequences of technological change on feeling of hope and despair in rural areas, plus those deep dark impulses of race, racism, xenophobia, and bigotry that have been in our country from
the beginning, and we've been wrestling with them from the beginning. And they have occasionally
won out against our better angels. This is not a good moment for our better angels, but
just like those dark impulses have always existed, so too have our better angels. And
so that is the struggle in front of us right now.
I will end on one last thing, and a hopeful thing,
because I think I'm just going to do that, too,
because this is my podcast.
Each of you, what should opponents of all of this
do in a sentence or two, each of you?
Tim and then Lindsay.
One of the most effective ways that authoritarians take power
is by scaring people.
Authoritarians, even the worst of them,
don't necessarily like to outlaw action.
What they want to do is make you so afraid of consequences
that you outlaw it yourself.
We saw a little of that already with, for example,
little small example of Gerald Ford Foundation
not giving Liz Cheney an award for fear
that they might lose
in a Trump administration their 501c3 exemption and Jeff Bezos at Washington Post. It's self-restraint.
I would argue that remember your civil rights, exercise your civil rights, be who you want it
to be, who you want to be now, who you want it to be before Trump. Don't let Trump stand in your way of enjoying the full benefits
of the Constitution.
If enough people do that and don't lose hope,
it gets harder for the authoritarian.
And I believe Trump is lazy.
I believe that Trump actually, at times,
would rather not take risks.
So if people make it hard for him to abuse power, it would lessen
the effect of his vengeance.
That word you're looking for is no.
Yes.
No, you may not. Lindsay, last word.
Well, I agree with so much of what Tim said. I think also there are still ways that even
if Trump can't always be held accountable,
the people around him can be. Whether it is through the rule of law, through our court system,
through public accountability, and we have to continue to try and use every mechanism
of accountability possible, which is I think the legal side or the public side of the don't,
you know, obey in advance. But the best and most long-lasting
way to combat authoritarianism is through accountability. And so we just have to keep
trying because the most pernicious thing will be if we do give up hope. So we cannot give
up and we have to keep trying to hold people to account.
Danielle Pletka That's perfect. And the word you're looking
for is, oh, no, you didn't. Something like that. Anyway, thank you so much.
You're exactly the people I want to talk to on a day like today.
We have had a long history and we've gone through some difficult times over the many,
many centuries we've been around.
So let's have some hope.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Kara.
Thank you, Kara. Thank you. On with Kara Swisher is produced by Christian Castro-Rosell, Kateri Yocum, Jolie Meyers,
Megan Burney, and Kaylin Lynch.
Nishat Kherwa is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Special thanks to Kate Gallagher and Claire Hyman.
Our engineers are Rick Kwan and Fernando Arruda and our theme music is by Trackademics.
If you're already following the show, I'll tell you I just saw the movie Wicked and it
comes out on November 22nd.
I urge you all to see it and it's time to try defying gravity.
And don't let them bring you down.
If not, yep, we're the Wicked Witch, but we look fantastic in green.
Thanks for listening to On with Kara Swisher from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast
Network and us.
We'll be back on Monday with more.
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