Peter Wehner worked for three Republican presidents. He is now an opinion writer for the New York Times. He is a Never Trumper.
He wrote this article a few days ago.
There’s never been any confusion about the character defects of Donald Trump. The question has always been just how far he would go and whether other individuals and institutions would stand up to him or become complicit in his corruption.
When I first took to these pages three summers ago to write about Mr. Trump, I warned my fellow Republicans to just say no both to him and his candidacy. One of my concerns was that if Mr. Trump were to succeed, he would redefine the Republican Party in his image. That’s already happened in areas like free trade, free markets and the size of government; in attitudes toward ethnic nationalism and white identity politics; in America’s commitment to its traditional allies, in how Republicans view Russia and in their willingness to call out leaders of evil governments like North Korea rather than lavish praise on them. But in no area has Mr. Trump more fundamentally changed the Republican Party than in its attitude toward ethics and political leadership.
For decades, Republicans, and especially conservative Republicans, insisted that character counted in public life. They were particularly vocal about this during the Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky scandal, arguing against “compartmentalization” — by which they meant overlooking moral turpitude in the Oval Office because you agree with the president’s policy agenda or because the economy is strong.
Senator Lindsey Graham, then in the House, went so far as to argue that “impeachment is not about punishment. Impeachment is about cleansing the office. Impeachment is about restoring honor and integrity to the office.”
All that has changed with Mr. Trump as president. For Republicans, honor and integrity are now passé. We saw it again last week when the president’s longtime lawyer Michael Cohen — standing in court before a judge, under oath — implicated Mr. Trump in criminal activity, while his former campaign chairman was convicted in another courtroom on financial fraud charges. Most Republicans in Congress were either silent or came to Mr. Trump’s defense, which is how this tiresome drama now plays itself out.
It is a stunning turnabout. A party that once spoke with urgency and apparent conviction about the importance of ethical leadership — fidelity, honesty, honor, decency, good manners, setting a good example — has hitched its wagon to the most thoroughly and comprehensively corrupt individual who has ever been elected president. Some of the men who have been elected president have been unscrupulous in certain areas — infidelity, lying, dirty tricks, financial misdeeds — but we’ve never before had the full-spectrum corruption we see in the life of Donald Trump.
For many Republicans, this reality still hasn’t broken through. But facts that don’t penetrate the walls of an ideological silo are facts nonetheless. And the moral indictment against Mr. Trump is obvious and overwhelming. Corruption has been evident in Mr. Trump’s private and public life, in how he has treated his wives, in his business dealings and scams, in his pathological lying and cruelty, in his bullying and shamelessness, in his conspiracy-mongering and appeals to the darkest impulses of Americans. (Senator Bob Corker, a Republican, refers to the president’s race-based comments as a “base stimulator.”) Mr. Trump’s corruptions are ingrained, the result of a lifetime of habits. It was delusional to think he would change for the better once he became president.
Some of us who have been lifelong Republicans and previously served in Republican administrations held out a faint hope that our party would at some point say “Enough!”; that there would be some line Mr. Trump would cross, some boundary he would transgress, some norm he would shatter, some civic guardrail he would uproot, some action he would take, some scheme or scandal he would be involved in that would cause large numbers of Republicans to break with the president. No such luck. Mr. Trump’s corruptions have therefore become theirs. So far there’s been no bottom, and there may never be. It’s quite possible this should have been obvious to me much sooner than it was, that I was blinded to certain realities I should have recognized.
In any case, the Republican Party’s as-yet unbreakable attachment to Mr. Trump is coming at quite a cost. There is the rank hypocrisy, the squandered ability to venerate public character or criticize Democrats who lack it, and the damage to the white Evangelical movement, which has for the most part enthusiastically rallied to Mr. Trump and as a result has been largely discredited. There is also likely to be an electoral price to pay in November.
But the greatest damage is being done to our civic culture and our politics. Mr. Trump and the Republican Party are right now the chief emblem of corruption and cynicism in American political life, of an ethic of might makes right. Dehumanizing others is fashionable and truth is relative. (“Truth isn’t truth,” in the infamous words of Mr. Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani.) They are stripping politics of its high purpose and nobility.
That’s not all politics is; self-interest is always a factor. But if politics is only about power unbounded by morality — if it’s simply about rulers governing by the law of the jungle, about a prince acting like a beast, in the words of Machiavelli — then the whole enterprise will collapse. We have to distinguish between imperfect leaders and corrupt ones, and we need the vocabulary to do so.
A warning to my Republican friends: The worst is yet to come. Thanks to the work of Robert Mueller — a distinguished public servant, not the leader of a “group of Angry Democrat Thugs” — we are going to discover deeper and deeper layers to Mr. Trump’s corruption. When we do, I expect Mr. Trump will unravel further as he feels more cornered, more desperate, more enraged; his behavior will become ever more erratic, disordered and crazed.
Most Republicans, having thrown their MAGA hats over the Trump wall, will stay with him until the end. Was a tax cut, deregulation and court appointments really worth all this?

The base is still supporting him. If the vote isn’t suppressed, Democrats should be in the majority!
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There is some hope if even Fox reporters are getting fed up.
……
Second Fox News reporter leaves amid objections to network
Another on-air reporter is leaving Fox News over frustrations with the direction and tone of the network, the second in the last three weeks to defect for those reasons.
Adam Housley, a Los Angeles-based reporter who joined Fox in 2001, felt there was diminished opportunity at the network for reporters and disapproved of the tenor of its on-air discussion, according to two former Fox News employees with knowledge of his situation.
Housley believed that as the network’s focus on Trump has grown — and the number of talking-head panels during news shows proliferated — it had become difficult to get hard reporting on air, according to one of those former employees.
“He’s not doing the type of journalism he wants to be doing,” the former employee said. “And he is unhappy with the tone of the conversation of the channel.”
Housley’s objections to the Trump-era Fox News are widely shared within the network’s reporting corps, according to current and former employees of the network. Conor Powell, the former Fox News Jerusalem bureau reporter, left the network earlier this month for similar reasons, according to a person close to him.
“People are losing their minds,” one current Fox News personality said, adding that reporters have relayed in conversation that the climate for them is worse than ever before…
https://www.politico.com/story/2018/08/23/fox-news-reporters-opinion-network-adam-housley-795278
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The Fox reporters may be different than the Center for American Progress staff in that the Fox employees who want to leave may have had their consciences triggered. After Hillary’s loss (a campaign in which CAP personnel had primary responsibilities), the unaccountable CAP published in Forbes, a higher education proposal similar to Marco Rubio’s proposed legislation. And, CAP called for states to authorize charter schools (March 2018), presumably knowing that a Gates-funded organization announced its goal for the charter school plot, “a diverse supply of different brands on a large scale”.
If CAP believed in democracy i.e. local control of tax dollars spent for public schools, it wouldn’t advocate for kleptocracy.
The only hope for the nation is the election of true progressives. Wehner will remain Republican and share company with establishment DINOS/limousine liberals like the NYT’s Vogel and David Leonhardt. They won’t like the optics but, they’ll have no problem with the policies and court justices of the right wing (except. on occasion, for bedroom issues).
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Truer words concerning Mr. Drumpf’s “reign of error” may never be spoken. Thank you Peter Wehner!
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If ‘you’ think America is better than this, ‘you’ know what to do on Nov. 6. If not, you’re getting the America you deserve (but do the rest of us?).
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Wehner, “Were the court appointments worth it?” Wehner doesn’t like the optics but, he believes corporations should shaft workers, the administration of law should protect racial and gender entitlement, and that the religious patriarchy should write laws. It’s why he’s been a Republican.
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This is the first of a three-part series that explains how evangelicals see the role of Trump–which is to say, he is the guy who will lead Pence to the presidency. It explains why they cling to Trump–Pence’s presidency will usher in Christian dominion (after The Donald has conveniently undermined our legal system which would normally prevent that).
Mike Pence’s plan to outlast Trump
CNN
To understand how a seemingly pious politician such as Pence could join Donald Trump and stick with him requires tracing the long path of his ambition. Pence wasn’t always the rigidly moralistic and confident conservative evangelical he professes to be today. But he has long believed he was destined for the presidency, Michael D’Antonio and Peter Eisner say.
https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/28/opinions/mike-pence-plan-to-outlast-trump-dantonio-eisner/index.html
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PS. Please forgive the Amazon link- I try to avoid giving more $ to Jeff Bezos but the reviews are worth the read.
“It presents an entirely damning portrait of Pence. You’ve seen his colors before, but not so vividly and in this detail.” ―Frank Bruni, The New York Times
“Producing a biography of a living, controversial politician is always difficult. D’Antonio and Eisner have succeeded in this well-documented, damning book. Cue the outrage from Sean Hannity et al.” ―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
In this well-rounded, deeply-investigated biography, the first full look at the vice president, two award-winning journalists unmask the real Mike Pence.
Little-known outside his home state until Donald Trump made him his running mate, Mike Pence―who proclaims himself a Christian first, a conservative second, and a Republican third―has long worn a carefully-constructed mask of Midwestern nice. Behind his self-proclaimed humility and self-abasing deference, however, hides a man whose own presidential ambitions have blazed since high school. Pence’s drive for power, perhaps inspired by his belief that God might have big plans for him, explains why he shocked his allies by lending Christian credibility to a scandal-plagued candidate like Trump.
In this landmark biography, Pulitzer Prize-winner Michael D’Antonio and Emmy-nominated journalist Peter Eisner follow the path Pence followed from Catholic Democrat to conservative evangelical Republican. They reveal how he used his time as rightwing radio star to build connections with powerful donors; how he was a lackluster lawmaker in Congress but a prodigious fundraiser from the GOP’s billionaire benefactors; and how, once he locked in his views on the issues―anti-gay, pro-gun, anti-abortion, pro big-business―he became laser-focused on his own pursuit of power.
As THE SHADOW PRESIDENT reveals, Mike Pence is the most important and powerful Christian Right politician America has ever seen. Driven as much by theology as personal ambition, Pence is now positioned to seize the big prize―the presidency―and use it to fashion a nation more pleasing to his god and corporate sponsors.
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Isn’t it an oxymoron for Wehner to ask colonialists like the Koch’s if the tax cut was worth it?
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The Republican party has been on a slippery ethical slope for some time. Embracing Trump simply confirms what many of us have understood. They are the party of exclusion and everything corporate and wealthy.
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Only the GOP is corrupt. Never the Democrats.
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Only since November 2016. Before that the Republicans were pure as the newfall’n snow. Especially #Resistance heroes like GWB and Maverick McCain.
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If you read this blog regularly, you will find big heapings of scorn for sell outs of both parties
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You have been strangely silent on DFER, easy on Cuomo, glowing about Booker, and completely let Arne off the hook. And don’t get me started on your gushing views on NCLB and RTTT.
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Ya got me! Ya never know where I stand!
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Apparently you haven’t been reading the blog at all, Greg, because she has NOT been “silent on DFER, easy on Cuomo, glowing about Booker,” OR “Let Arne off the hook.” She has critized and attacked all of the rotten educational stuff you accuse her of not doing. Get a grip.
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TOW, sorry, should have put sarcasm alert on that. Dripping with, that is.
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Greg,
I got it.
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And thank you, Diane. I sure appreciate it.
Both parties are culpable. Both parties are so wrong about education.
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What will this period be labled?
And, hundreds of GOP (white, male) legislators will be asked by their grandchildren and impoverished constituents: WHERE WERE YOU? DID YOU SPEAK UP?
Over the years – we know time, people, and events by labels and quotes
The Depression. The ’60s. Baby-boomers. McCarthyism. War on Poverty.
Reaganomics.
“Ask not what your country can do for you…”
“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself”
Years from now, this period, this president, these legislators will be remembered. Someone will have the just right label or quote.
Spineless Senators. Isolationism. Hypocrisy. Democracy’s Demise.
The Selling Out of Americans. Privativzing America. Congress Shrugged. Reverse-Robin Hood Republicans.
And the quotes that will go down on history from access hollywood to gross disrespect of POW McCain will be remembered.
NOVEMBER.
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I agree with you, Diane. I was merely responding to “retired teacher,” not to anything you have written. If I recall correctly, you aren’t even a registered Democrat. You are a member of New York’s Working Families Party.
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No, I am a registered Dem. I support the candidate, not the party. However I am not a “radical purist”—I vote for the lesser of two evils so as not to end up with the devil
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Surprise, surprise- Paul Allen- Gates’ Microsoft co-founder donated this year to keep the U.S. House, Republican. 78% of what he donated went to Republican-affiliated efforts.
When he and Gates wanted to defeat Washington state judges who had rendered verdicts favorable to public schools, Allen donated a minimum $300,000 and Gates, a minimum $200,000. They both attended the exclusive Lakeside school where they apparently learned how to screw the 99%. They live in the state with the most regressive tax system in the nation, where the poor pay rates up to 7 times that of the rich.
In summary- ugly men doing ugly things to the nation.
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Gates is disgusting.
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Which kind of proves that when it comes to destroying public education, the billionaires know which party will help them THE MOST while they obviously fear having Democrats in total control.
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lots…
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With luck, Diane will post about the use of the N-word by an executive during business meetings at Reed Hastings’ company, Netflix.
From Deadline Hollywood, June 22, 2018, Reed Hastings quoted, “I realize that my privilege has made me intellectualize or otherwise minimize race issues.” The article described Reed’s comments as understatements especially when added to Reed’s description that his staff showed “unacceptably low racial awareness and sensitivity.”
Reed Hastings is the guy who financed the Hastings Fund Network ($100 mil.) in 2016 “to
create technologically driven charter schools- establishing computers as an integral part of everyday classrooms.” Hastings is the poster child for for what is wrong with private schools and for tech tyrants driving the education of students.
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I know I’m breaking my own self imposed embargo of not commenting on political posts but, damn, can’t resist. My headline:
“An Independent Laments the Corruption of Both the Dimocrapic and Rethuglican Parties”
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Duane: It’s GREAT to have you comment. Please stop the embargo on political posts. I enjoy your input.
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Thanks for the very kind words, carolmalaysia!
Don’t have any idea where you are located but I hope you can make it to Indy for the NPE conference. Would like to meet you in person as I’ve been fortunate enough to have done with others who post here at prior conferences.
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Duane: “I hope you can make it to Indy for the NPE conference.” Thanks for the kind words. There is a lot going on in my life at the current time so I won’t be going to Indianapolis.
I live in NW Indiana and it is about a three hour drive…four if you count the time change. Why a state would want two time zones has never made any sense to me.
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Can I bribe you with a jar of my “Oye’s Picante Pickles”?
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Duane: I love dill pickles but like ice cream and chocolate much better. Nope, won’t work.
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What if I promise to make some home made hand cranked ice cream and then stop and get some chocolate goodies from the bakery where my son, the chef, works when I drive over to Indy. Boy, they make THE best chocolate goodies I’ve ever eaten!
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Duane: You are making me laugh. Great idea. Sorry, it still won’t work. Comes mighty close, however. You are pushing ALL the right buttons!!
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I just think you would add quite a bit intellectually to the conference, that’s all.
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Never made any sense to me either.
I’d think they would want at least three.
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As Ronald Reagan said, “There you go again”
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New PR messaging for education deform, “Rise high, fall fast”. The comment was by a Netflix exec. after his firing for using the N-word at company meetings.
When you have low racial awareness and sensitivity and when privilege makes you minimize race, as Reed Hastings described himself and his management team, it reflects an uncorrectable moral void. IMO, Gates, the Waltons, and Kochs are like Hastings, absent his bungled explanation for the indefensible.
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Wall Street Journal Editorial Board states 85% of blue-collar workers say their lives are going in the right direction
This just was posted on the WH email. What a bunch of BS. How reliable is the Harris poll?
A poll just came out saying 60% of Americans do not support Trump. I highly doubt that 88% of the people now think their children will have a better future thanks to Trump.
…………………..
The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board writes that “blue-collar workers may be the most optimistic folks in America. Eighty-five percent say they see their lives heading in the right direction,” according to a new Harris Poll. “Seventy percent agree ‘the American Dream is alive for people like me,’ and among those who are parents 88% agree with the statement that ‘my children will have a better future than I will.’”
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Who pulled the wool over their eyes? Stagnant wages. Factories hit hard by Trump tariffs.
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The thing is, I NEVER felt the bulk of the Republican party cared a whit about moral failings, honor, or truth. They just SAID they did to get the votes. How many “pressing” social issues did the Republicans run on, and then after the election, never really talked about again? For Republican elites to act shocked, I tell you, shocked, at where their party is today just means they have had blinders on for twenty plus years.
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So Bob Woodward is also publishing a book about the the Orange IDIOT. People who have worked in the WH spoke out. GOOD! Trump is wracking up a number of ‘bad books’.
…………………………
Trump to Woodward: Sounds Like This Is Going to Be a Bad One
In an audio recording and transcript of a phone call between journalist Bob Woodward and Donald Trump, the president lamented the fact that a another negative book would be released about his administration. In the audio from The Washington Post, Woodward told the president that his upcoming book, Fear, would be “a tough look at the world and your administration and you.” Trump responded that the book sounded like it was “going to be a bad one.” Woodward then told the president that he “made every effort” to reach out to him while the book was being written, including reaching out to White House staffers Kellyanne Conway and Raj Shah, and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). Conway had apparently had a lunch with Woodward but the message was not relayed to Trump. Trump said he remembered Graham mentioning Woodward’s request to him in a meeting, and told Woodward that Shah had no access to him. “Raj, I hardly have… I don’t speak to Raj,” Trump told Woodward. Woodward also briefly described to the president his sourcing methods for the book, patching in his assistant Evelyn Duffy at one point to confirm that she transcribed “hundreds of hours” of interview tapes of individuals who worked in the White House and other offices. “So I have another bad book coming out. Big deal,” Trump remarked later in the call.
[Read it at Washington Post]
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