Close
Current temperature in Boston - 62 °
BECOME A MEMBER
Get access to a personalized news feed, our newsletter and exclusive discounts on everything from shows to local restaurants, All for free.
Already a member? Sign in.
The Bay State Banner
BACK TO TOP
The Bay State Banner
POST AN AD SIGN IN

Trending Articles

James Brown tribute concert packs the Strand

The Boston Public Quartet offers ‘A Radical Welcome’

Democratic leaders call for urgent action in Haiti

READ PRINT EDITION

Warning: More cesspool politics ahead

Lee A. Daniels

Ted Cruz is gone — and good riddance. The Texas senator, a hypocritical, mean-spirited bully, fully deserved his humiliating defeat by Donald Trump in the May 3rd Indiana GOP primary.

Unfortunately, the social and political poison that made a Cruz candidacy viable for so long isn’t gone. Donald Trump’s success completes for the moment the most astonishing act of self-destruction in the history of American politics: that of the Republican Party itself. Some GOP officeholders and operatives are now crying in their teacups about Trump — with a few even publicly pledging not to vote for him. But the GOP’s leadership has only itself to blame.

Consider this: The Republican Party is about to nominate a man of dubious political beliefs who has never before held any political office and whose personal life has, according to his many boasts over the years, violated several tenets of supposedly sacred conservative “values.” Yet, he has vanquished a Republican primary field that included four current governors, four current senators, and the son and brother of the Party’s last two presidents.

And Trump conquered the field not by reasoned discourse and a coherent policy platform, but via a reality-show-like campaign that appealed to the worst instincts and attitudes of a large segment of Republican voters.

That “winning” approach was fully on display in the weeks leading up to the Indiana primary. By then, the once-smarmy public “friendship” of Cruz and Trump had degenerated into a venomous display of cesspool politics. Trump’s scurrilous references to Cruz’s wife and father provoked Cruz to describe Trump as “a pathological liar,” “utterly amoral,” “a narcissist at a level I don’t think this country has ever seen,” “a serial philanderer … [who] boasts about it ….”

In addition to what it says about the character of both men, we ought to see this deep dive into cesspool politics in its broader dimension: as a blowback of the immoral, win-at-all-costs attitude Republicans had been cultivating within the party for years. It should have been clear to them years ago that the profound intolerance and irrationality they stoked among GOP voters to try to wreck the Obama administration would sooner or later come home to roost.

In fact, as soon as Obama took office, the GOP’s “Obama Derangement Syndrome” began to wreak havoc among Republicans as a bloc of GOP voters applied a no-holds-barred intolerance to Republican officeholders who they deemed insufficiently extreme and voted them out of office.

That descent into extremism also led to Cruz’s 2012 U.S. Senate victory, and, he thought, gave him the ammunition to begin running for the White House — by denigrating the GOP’s congressional leadership — from the moment he arrived in Washington.

A year earlier, Trump’s grab for attention in 2011 on a “platform” mimicking the GOP “Birthers”—who claimed that Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. and therefore wasn’t eligible to be President—had revealed just how irrational and uninterested in logic and facts a large segment of the GOP electorate was willing to be. Obama’s re-election and the major achievements he continued to score despite Republican control of Congress intensified the erosion of political sense and common decency within the party.

Cruz will now be overshadowed by the focus on Trump. But it shouldn’t be forgotten that (albeit Ohio Governor John Kasich, who ended his campaign less than a day after Cruz did) they were the last men standing in the GOP primary. For they’re two sides of the same coin: Cruz tried to capture the Presidency by running against his own party from the inside, while Trump, armed with his own financial war chest, was raiding it from outside.

Now that both parties’ nominees are set, expect more cesspool politics from Trump and the horde of overtly racist and sexist individuals and groups that comprise part of his winning coalition. Remember: He defeated the other primary candidates by using the most naked appeals to bigotry of any presidency-seeker since the segregationist ticket of the Dixiecrat Party of 1948. That’s what thrills the 40 percent or so of Republican voters who constitute his base. Indeed, the scurrilous and sexist t-shirts and other merchandise that are the artifacts of conservatives’ “Hillary Derangement Syndrome” are already being hawked at Trump’s rallies. Despite his half-hearted promises to be “presidential,” cesspool politics is the only kind of politics Donald Trump knows how to play.

Lee A. Daniels, a longtime journalist, is a keynote speaker and author whose books include “Last Chance: The Political Threat to Black America.” He is writing a book on the Obama years and the 2016 election. He can be reached at leedanielsjournalist@gmail.com.