Lying Is Loyalty in Trump’s GOP
- by Vanity Fair
- Oct 07, 2024
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Donald Trump, who proved to be deeply dishonest as a candidate in 2016, and as president for four years, is lying with reckless abandon as he tries to return to the White House. Last week, for example, he claimed a fake endorsement from JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. When pressed on the claim, Trump said, âI donât know anything about it,â and blamed a member of his staff. But the way in which the rest of the Republican Party has subscribed to the Trump unreality show is rapidly evolving into a kind of mass psychogenic disorder. Unlike in 2016, when he was an outlier, Trump now controls the entire Republican Party. You might even say that Trumpâwhose daughter-in-law is the co-chair of the RNC and whose son essentially picked his vice-presidential candidateâis the GOP, sort of like the Borgias without the religious affiliation.
Trump, of course, is not the only one who resides in the dis- and misinformation ecosystem of his own making. There is his running mate, JD Vance, who recently suggested that fact-checking is a partisan activity because one side is so profoundly stymied by facts. âThe rules were that you guys werenât going to fact-check,â Vance whined when fact-checked by CBSâs Margaret Brennan during the vice-presidential debateâwhich was how the right responded when moderators fact-checked Trump during his ABC debate against Kamala Harris. There are senators like Marco Rubio, who recently accused the nonpartisan Bureau of Labor Statistics of being fake news, writing on X: âAnother fake jobs report out from Biden-Harris government today.â And then there are business magnates like Elon Musk, who has parroted a number of Trumpâs baseless claims and who joined the former president on the campaign trail this weekend.
In a world where everything that doesnât support the MAGA narrative is considered âfake,â there is no room for inconvenient truthsâor even just truths that donât make the case for MAGA. In fact, simply saying the truth is a sign of disloyalty in Trumpâs Republican Party, where reality has been destroyed and rebuilt by Trumpâs fictions. The more truth-bending the lies, the more Republicans must buy into it, which has turned lying into a litmus test for the GOP. Take, for instance, House Speaker Mike Johnson, who was recently asked by ABCâs George Stephanopoulos: âCan you say unequivocally that Joe Biden won the 2020 election and Trump lost?â Itâs a yes-or-no question, but Johnson refused to answer in kind, saying that itâs somehow âa gotcha game.â
This past week, the depths of MAGA mendacity reached a new low when Trump used Hurricane Heleneâwhich devastated parts of Georgia, the Carolinas, and beyond, leading to over 230 deathsâto promote another smear against his opponents: On Monday, he said of Georgiaâs governor Brian Kemp, âHeâs been calling [Biden]â and âhasnât been able to get him,â as if Biden has been twiddling his thumbs amid the disaster. This was apparently a bridge too far even for Kemp, a pro-Trump Republican, who eventually debunked Trumpâs claim: â[Biden] just said, âHey, what do you need?â And I told him, you know, âWe got what we need. Weâll work through the federal process,ââ Kemp said, correcting the record. âHe offered that if thereâs other things we need, just to call him directly, whichâI appreciate that.â
Nevertheless, Trump and his allies, including Musk, spent the rest of the week spreading falsehoods about the hurricane response. Few baseless claims were more disturbing than the one that Trump spewed about immigrants and Harris: âKamala spent all her FEMA money, billions of dollars, on housing for illegal migrants, many of whom should not be in our country,â he said Thursday in Michigan, suggesting that Harris diverted disaster relief for political reasons. âThey stole the FEMA money, just like they stole it from a bank, so they could give it to their illegal immigrants that they want to have vote for them this season.â It was a âbald-facedâ lie, as the White House declared, but itâs one that Trump continued to repeat at least twice this past Friday, despite it already having been roundly debunked.
The big irony here is that it is not Harris but Trump who is guilty of doing this. According to The Washington Post, âIn 2019, the Trump administration, in the middle of hurricane season, told Congress that it was taking $271 million from DHS programs, including $155 million from the disaster fund, to pay for immigration detention space and temporary hearing locations for asylum seekers who had been forced to wait in Mexico.â Indeed, Trump, as I pointed out earlier this cycle, has repeatedly accused Democrats of doing things he actually did (see: his claim that Harris heading to the top of the ticket was a âcoupâ).
Again, Trump lying is nothing new. But the sheer volume of his falsehoodsâand the way theyâre systematically endorsed by leading members of the Republican Partyâhas tipped the base into the unreality that the Democratic political establishment is utterly nefarious and partisan. But the actual reality is more boring: The federal government is staffed largely by nonpartisan career civil servants, and it is, rather, Project 2025 that would reshape it into something nefarious and partisan. As another hurricane heads toward Florida, one has to wonder how deadly the consequences of the GOPâs unreality will be in the coming daysânot to mention in the next four years if Trumpâs government is tasked with relieving the disasters to come.
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