
Trump Defenders Tie Themselves in Knots Over Bolton Book
While the Trump apologists scramble, expect members of Congress to profess ignorance.

On the eve of its release, John Boltonās book The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir sits in warehouses across the country, just awaiting the order to be shipped.
The Trump administration has filed an eleventh-hour legal challenge, seeking a restraining order to prevent the bookās release. But the revelations in the book by President Trumpās former national security advisor have already started to enter the nationās political bloodstream. Copies of the book have found their way to reporters, who are sharing the bookās bombshells in previews and publicity interviews.
One revelation in particular seems to be roiling the presidentās most ardent defenders, the anti-anti-Trumpers, and his run-of-the-mill media fanboys: Boltonās characterization of President Trumpās dealings with Chinese president Xi Jinping. The most damaging detail is not that Trump apparently āpleadedā with China to help him win re-election, bad though that is. Nor is it that he used our āgreat patriot farmersā as cannon fodder for a trade war he lost. Rather, the really horrible detail is the internment camps.
Yes, internment camps.
Back in 2016 there was a meme of a photoshopped campaign poster that read: TRUMP: Probably no internment camps. Now, in the fourth season of Trump, the Presidency, the writers have willed this meme into reality.
According to the Washington Post, Bolton recounts that at a meeting between Trump and Xi at the G20, the question of Chinaās massive detainment camps containing perhaps a million Uighurs came up, and Xi defended them. Bolton says that Trump praised Xi for this decision: āAccording to our interpreter . . . Trump said that Xi should go ahead with building the camps, which Trump thought was exactly the right thing to do.ā
Itās hard to say how much more weāre going to find out about this claim: Presumably only Xi and Trump and their interpreters are privy to what, exactly, was said. Bolton and his aides getting the rundown from the interpreter and the president (who we all know is not a reliable narrator) might be argued about, but itās probably unlikely that anyone else in-the-know at the time is going to start weighing in publicly.
In an appearance last night on Sean Hannityās Fox program, Trump denied Boltonās China claims but indicated that Boltonās book revealed classified information. Trump also told the Wall Street Journal that Bolton āis a liar.ā Wait, which is it? Is Bolton exposing classified information or is he a lying liar who lies? Itās hard to see how both claims hang together.
Of course, itās also possible that at some point Trump could very well just confirm that what Bolton said is true. How many times have we seen this movie before? Team Orange Man Good rushes to discredit anyone reporting or claiming negative things about President Trumpāonly to have him ultimately say: āYeah, and Iād do it again!ā
Still, the initial reaction on the right to Boltonās account of the Trump-Xi conversation about the Uighurs has been one of horrorānot horror because of what Trump allegedly said but horror at what it might mean for his 2020 chances.
As Patrick Chovanec observes: āOnce again, not a single person is saying āThe Donald Trump I know wouldn't do that.āā
This too shall pass, and in short order the Trump apologists will slink back to telling us why Joe Biden is a compromised socialist with declining mental facultiesābut while the Bolton book dominates the news cycle, itās worth commemorating some of the best of the worst takes on it.
Heās blowing a layup.
Breitbart editor-at-large and writer/director John Nolte is āthoroughly disgusted with Trump right now.ā
Hereās why:

But waitāis Trump āblowing a layupā or is this all just a Deep State conspiracy?

Sometimes occasional glimmers of reality will briefly shine through the layers of self-delusion one must accept to be a professional Trump defenderāonly to be occluded by a conspiracy theory a few hours later.
āLet us not just make this *all* about Trump.ā
Bethany Mandel, a writer, had a thread where she moved through the stages of Trump defense pretty quickly, anticipating people would accuse her of making excuses for Trump, which was pretty much the entire point of it.

And to Mandelās credit, she skipped over the part where you spend the first phase discrediting and doubting the person making the allegations.
https://twitter.com/bethanyshondark/status/1273340318130241540
Alas, this is all about the Bad Orange Man. Mandel thinks āChina is too big and powerful to deal withā and every world leader knew and did nothing. Fine. But this is an election year and itās Donald Trump on the ballot here, not Angela Merkel.
John Bolton was mean to me.
Federalist publisher Ben Domenech writes:
I would not be basing anything on the validity of John Bolton's book given its numerous serious factual flaws. No offense to those of you who thought he was super trustworthy.
Has he read the book? Who knows. But please, elaborate:
Alrighty then! I guess weāll just have to wait and see what thatās all about.
Hiring Bolton was Trumpās biggest error after. . .
Meanwhile in Federalist land, Mollie Hemingway (a consistent critic of Bolton) spent the afternoon suggesting Bolton was not credible, citing former President Bush and others across the aisle to paint a picture that heās a guy not to be trusted.

It really says something that Hemingway thinks hiring Bolton was Trumpās second-biggest mistake as president, considering how many other hiring mistakes he has made over the years..

No word on whether detention camps are good or bad, Mollie is playing the Trump defense game more slowly than, say, Bethany Mandel, who fast-forwards to the end.
The inevitable pattern of the Trump defense.
If youāre in the conservative media ecosystem of punditry, the Trump defense game goes like this:
https://twitter.com/Popehat/status/1273437531317493760?s=20
Eventually, the game ends when the person playing it accepts that, yes, Orange Man is bad, but others have done the sameāor worse!ābad stuff before.
But senators and congressmen have a different game.
As Steve Vladeck put it, hereās how we can expect most GOP members of Congress to respond when theyāre asked about Bolton:
That ploy can only last so long. And youāre going to get a lot more of these questions as Congress gets back into full swing before the election and reporters follow members of both chambers walking to the floor for votes. (Maybe Republican senators will change their mind on remote voting to, ya know, be safe from COVID-19.) And the Republican senators canāt say they donāt want to reward Bolton for not testifying during impeachment because they were against having witnesses at the trial.
It might seem like the only three options available to Trumpās congressional enablers are (1) to say Bolton is lying; (2) to deflect by saying that Bolton was violating the law regarding classified information (an argument thatās in tension with the idea that he was lying); or (3) to say that none of the Bolton revelations matter.
Unlike their media brethren, the Trump-enabling elected officials (except the tactically dumb) will probably not accuse Bolton of lying. As Vladeck says, their approach will be one of strategic silence, followed by āI didnāt read it.ā (If only John Bolton starred in Hellboy, then you know Ted Cruz would have read it.)
And, because the Bolton story involves China, the GOP is in a very weird position, given the partyās historic views of that countryās Communist regime. The Senate just last month passed a bill called the āUyghur Human Rights Policy Actā and President Trump signed it into law on Wednesday, the same day Boltonās revelations dropped. It passed the Senate unanimously.
On the trade front, vulnerable senators have to be careful about the Bolton revelations because most incumbent Republicans facing voters this fall come from states with big farming industries. If, as Bolton alleges, Trump asked Xi to bail him out electorally by buying American products after his trade war failed, what do these senators tell voters who might feel like they were used as props? Republican voters have shown a high threshold for abuse by Trump and the GOP, but gambling with their livelihoods for political gain might cause some trouble.
Had Republican senators done the right thing and pushed for Bolton to testify during impeachment, they might not be in this tough position today. (Especially had they removed Trump, of course.) But by tying themselves to the mast of Trumpism, they have made matters worse for their electoral future.