Trump's politics feeds on fear and paranoia

The Republican Party today has become a vast repository of conspiracy theories, fake news, false accusations and paranoid fantasies.

By Fareed Zakaria

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Published: Sun 4 Nov 2018, 7:00 PM

Last updated: Sun 4 Nov 2018, 9:01 PM

It is commonplace to hear and read about US President Donald Trump's takeover of the Republican Party. And certainly there is lots of evidence that the GOP is animated these days by an unquestioning devotion to Trump. But the problem is that Republicans are now becoming the party not of Trump but of Joseph McCarthy, the Wisconsin senator who in the 1950s accused the State Department of treason, called George Marshall - head of the army during World War II, later secretary of state and defense - a traitor, and implied that the American government was being secretly run by the Kremlin.
The Republican Party today has become a vast repository of conspiracy theories, fake news, false accusations and paranoid fantasies. Consider the most recent example. Trump has scared much of the country about a group of Central Americans, fleeing poverty and violence, who are hoping to come to the US border and apply for asylum. It's perfectly reasonable to oppose letting them in, though it is cruel to demonise them constantly. But Republicans have not been content to oppose granting asylum. They have concocted facts out of thin air and invented conspiracies about who is behind this group of impoverished migrants.
Last week, one of the prominent hosts at Fox News, which is now the Pravda of the Republican Party, suggested that more than 100 Daesh fighters had been caught "trying to use this caravan." Trump, a devoted viewer of Fox, pounced on that claim, declaring that "unknown Middle Easterners" had joined the caravan. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., asked whether Democratic donor George Soros was funding this movement.
None of these claims has an iota of truth to it. But they are repeated and reinforced across the country. The notion that Soros is the dark mastermind behind all kinds of movements is now deeply lodged in the Republican Party. The slurs against Soros are revealing. Let's remember, Soros is one of the most successful businessmen in history, who made his money in as pure a form of capitalism as there is, reading and betting on the market. He has become one of the world's leading philanthropists.
So why the focus on him? He is not the only big funder of liberal causes and candidates. Soros is not a mysterious figure. He's given countless speeches and interviews and written many books and articles. His Open Society Foundations puts all its grants in plain view, on its website. But Soros is a perfect bogeyman for conspiracy theorists. He is rich, powerful, grew up abroad and has a foreign accent.
Many Republicans now speak often and openly of the dangers of "globalists" - but for some reason, these "globalists" tend to be Jewish financiers (Lloyd Blankfein, Gary Cohn, Janet Yellen, George Soros).
It doesn't end there. In his riveting book Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire, Kurt Andersen describes the mountain of conspiracy theories spouted by Republicans these days - about the UN, vaccines, gun control, and Shariah law, among other topics. Based on zero evidence, in an age of science and technology, these ideas are now more widespread than ever before.
America has a history of paranoid politics, infused with the belief that there is some hidden conspiracy to betray the republic. But these forces used to be peripheral, voiced by marginal figures. When they seemed to be growing, as with the John Birch Society in the 1960s, mainstream conservatives like William F. Buckley publicly and forcefully denounced them. Today senior Republicans emulate them. President Trump has given a ringing endorsement to Alex Jones, the country's most influential and extreme conspiracy theorist. "Your reputation is amazing," Trump said in a 2015 interview with Jones. "I will not let you down."
The Republican Party has many good people and good ideas. But none of them matters while it houses and feeds fantasies, conspiracies and paranoia, tinged with racism and bigotry. Republicans are now squarely the party of Joe McCarthy, and until that cancer is excised, they should not be entrusted with power.
- Washington Post Writers Group


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