
What Does It Mean to be a "Supporter" of a Candidate?
Also: The Bulwark is right-wing garbage.
No Triad on Mondayāhave a great Memorial Day weekend. And please read Will Selberās magnificent, heartrending piece in which he remembers some of his comrades.
Warning: Todayās edition is fairly self-indulgent. I hope youāll forgive me. Share it if it moves you. And then go outside and enjoy the long weekend, friends.
1. Lie For Me
Thereās lots of discussion about āsupportingā Candidate X versus Candidate Y this week and itās worth unpacking what people mean by that word.
How do you āsupportā a candidate? You vote for him or her. Thatās it. Thatās supporting them.
You could also give them money, I guess. Or work for his/her campaign. But those are the only ways a person can actually support a candidate.
But on the internet thatās not really what people mean, is it?
Check out this story in which Ron DeSantisās press spokeswoman got rekt by a Twitter rando:
Christina Pushaw, a top adviser to Ron DeSantis, argued with a 16-year-old Trump supporter about botox and Ukraine on Twitter just one day after the Florida governor launched his campaign for the presidency.
The argument started on Thursday after āGOP Joshā ā a 16-year-old supporter of former President Donald Trump ā asked Pushaw, āHow much of the $1M DeStablishment raised yesterday will go towards your Botox?ā
āDoes your mom know what you are doing on the internet,ā Pushaw shot back, prompting GOP Josh to take several digs at Pushawās alleged cosmetic work.
Who is āGOP Joshā? Umm, heās this kid?
Man, I would love to meet the people who get their political analysis from 16-year-olds. But donāt dunk on GOP Josh because he is, at the end of the day, a kid.
What I want to focus on is that GOP Josh is identified as a āsupporterā of Donald Trump.
What does that mean?
GOP Josh did not vote for Trump in 2016 or 2020, though he might vote for Trump in 2024, depending on when his birthday falls. And it is not legal for minors to make political contributions, so he hasnāt given Trump money.
GOP Josh isnāt a āsupporterā in the traditional sense. Heās a fanboy.
And hereās where we get to the distinction between real-world āsupportā and āinternet support.ā
You can vote for a candidate, or give money to a candidate, and still make objective judgments about the candidate. When the candidate does something unwise or harmful, you can say so. If the candidate is doing badly, you can admit it. Because being honest about the candidate does not diminish your supportāSen. Smith is getting your vote and so itās okay to acknowledge that Sen. Smith is in trouble in the polls, or that Sen. Smithās statement on the Widget Act is dumb/wrong/whatever.
But with āinternet supportā itās different. If youāre an internet supporter, then the nature of your contribution is your public performance. You are there to rep the brand. Sometimes that means highlighting good stuff for your candidateāāThe Iowa numbers show that heās crushing it!ā Or: āOur guy just passed a bill to help veterans who got sick from burn pits.ā
But most of the time, being an internet supporter means running cover for your team. It means minimizing mistakes, or positing alternative facts to explain away problems. Not to put too find a point on it: Being an internet supporter means conducting yourself as if you were a paid employee of the candidate.
Because if you donātāif you concede that he or she did something badāthen it diminishes the fundamental nature of your support, which is not a vote, but a posture.
I reject this view. Utterly and completely.
Youāre probably as tired of reading this as I am of saying it, but weāre going to do it again anyway:
It would be terrible for America if Donald Trump is the Republican nominee in 2024. It would be better for America if any of the other Republicans running against him were to win the nomination. It would be best if the nominee were Asa Hutchinson. It would be good if the nominee were Tim Scott. It would be just fine if the nominee were Nikki Haley or Glenn Youngkin. It would not be great if the nominee were DeSantis, because he presents his own set of OrbƔnist dangers.
But even so, a DeSantis nomination is still less dangerous than Trump for a variety of reasons, beginning with the fact that Trump has already attempted a coup dāetat.
As such, Iāll happily register as a Republican and āsupportā one of those folks with my vote in the primary.
But that doesnāt mean Iām going to lie to you for them and pretend that everything is going great and that they have a good chance to beat Trump.1
By the same token, Iām likely to vote for Joe Biden in this particular general election because, as Iāve explained here often, heās been a successful president who has done a pretty good job for America.
But that doesnāt mean Iām going to lie to you for him, either. If Biden is in trouble, Iāll tell you. If Biden does something unwise or dangerous, Iāll say so. As Iāve done in the past.
To the extent that Iām on a team, itās #TeamLiberalDemocracy.
I mention all this because at The Bulwark this week we received some criticism from people who were confused as to why we werenāt āsupportingā Ron DeSantis. This is a category error. The people making this criticism are talking about āinternet supportā because they view that as the way political commentary should work: You have a team and you support your team by defending it against criticism, positioning it for success, and attacking those on the other team. You must, always and everywhere, project what you hope to happen as the reality that is happening.
And fair enough: We donāt do that.
If this sort of thing appeals to you, The Bulwark is not the place to find it.
On the other hand, if you want to see around corners and understand the shape of things to come, weāre pretty good at that stuff. Donāt make me remind you that I told everyone Trump would be insisting that he won the election and would be the overwhelming favorite when he ran in 2024āand I told you this in October of 2020.
So maybe sign up for the free list, or even become a member and support us if you want publications like ours to exist in the world.
One other thing: I saw one critic wondering aloud how Never Trump conservatives could have turned their back on all of the āissuesā they once held dear.
There are three responses to this question.
(1) Some conservatives may have reconsidered their views on āthe issues.ā This would not be a crazy thing to do. If āthe issuesā you believed in over the course of many years led to an attempted coup, then it would not be unreasonable to question whether or not the positions you once held on them had been wise.
(2) Other conservatives may have simply decided that an issue which had not been present in America since Jim Crowāthe survival of liberal democracy and the rule of lawāhad suddenly reappeared and superseded the old issues in urgency.
(3) But itās also not ridiculous to look around and notice that for a number of issues, the Democratic party is now at least as hospitable as the Republican party. If you are in favor of robust foreign policy, your natural home 10 years ago was in the Republican party. Today, you can still find outposts for that view in the GOP, but the main body of the party has turned to isolationism. The Democratic party is now the natural home for people who want America engaged in world affairs.
The same can be said about the free market, and globalism, and free speech, and individual liberty, and crime, and the rule of law.2
The map for these issues isnāt perfectāthere are still some Republicans who believe in those things and some Democrats who are opposed to them. But the main bodies of the parties, as marked by the leaders who will be their presidential nominees and the preferences of the rank-and-file, have switched.
The GOP is the party of punishing corporations for political views, fighting trade wars, banning books, criminalizing speech, pardoning felons, and excusing law breakers.
Again: Not perfectly and you can find exceptions. But in general.
For those who have held onto their āconservativeā views on āthe issues,ā well, at this point, theyāre cheering for the clothes.
2. Also, The Bulwark Is Right-Wing Garbage
Itās kismet that this week Slateās advice column also features a letter from a parent who is horrified to discover that his/her teenage son has subscribed to The Bulwark:
Dear Care and Feeding,
A month back, my 16-year-old son āDylanā used some of his money to subscribe to the Bulwark. Itās a transphobic, warmongering, right-wing turd of āonline news.ā We had perhaps foolishly not been monitoring his internet expenses, and only noticed when the bill for his subscription came up.
Dylan has since been banned from recreational use of the internet in our home, his phone has been severely restricted, and heās only permitted online access for the purpose of schoolwork. However, with the school year entering into finals season, he does legitimately need some access for research papers or to collaborate on group projects. While heās permitted access at home for approved activities like his coursework, heās started opting to stay late at school and use their computers, or go to the library to use the computers there.
While I know heās been going to the library to use the computers, courtesy of calling some of the staff to make sure he really is where he said he was going, theyāve been unwilling to show or even keep track of what sites heās accessing. And somehow, I doubt heās just doing research on biology or chemistry. How do I stop him from circumventing these steps?
āStymied
OMG.
Now look, what are the chances that this letter is a troll? Iām thinking >95 percent. But letās just pretend for a moment that itās genuine, because the Slate columnistās advice is like a parody of tankie pablum:
Thereās not much that you can do to monitor your sonās computer use at the library, though you may want to try popping up on him unannounced so that you can see for yourself just what heās up to. I think the more important thing for you to focus on now is challenging the ideas that he came across on the Bulwark and identifying just what made the site compelling to him in the first place. You should be having some serious conversations about gender and sexism, racism, various phobias, and the problem with right-wing politics. . . . You canāt just take for granted that keeping him off this site is enough to challenge any problematic beliefs he may have developed. Your counter-programming efforts are just as important, if not more, than limiting his access to the web.
You should also be talking to him about what he and his friends are discussing these days. Are he and other boys consuming this content together? Who tipped him off to the Bulwark in the first place? Find out who may be influencing him these days and focus your energies on showing him just why they arenāt to be taken as authorities. Show your son the problem with the ideologies heās engaged with and keep these dialogues going even if it seems like youāve āgotten through.ā The right-wing internet holds a lot of danger for young men who can be easily radicalized if their families arenāt proactive about interrupting their access and challenging the ideas they may have already glommed onto while browsing.
Again I say: OMG.
Also, I want to pretend that this is a real letter so that I can picture Dylan having a sleepover with some buddies and one of them says,
Tristan: Hey guys. I found this neolib Never Trump website in my old manās browser history. And itās got MONA CHAREN on it!
Dante: I dunno, TāI heard she was guilty of war crimes.
Tristan: Naw, dog. You gotta read it. These guys want globalism AND forever wars.
Apple: Guys, this isnāt funny. Iām scared.
Dylan [pushing his way to the front]: Let me see it. Whatās this podcast with Charlie Sykes? Oooooohāheās talking to David Frum. And they like institutions. . . . [eyes glaze over] I, uh, Iāve gotta go to the bathroom. Whatās the URL?
In my day, we just passed around copies of Playboy and the Public Interest. I guess todayās kids are into harder stuff.
So The Bulwark is both a partisan liberal Democratic propaganda arm and a source of transphobic, warmongering, right-wing news.
Thank you for building this incredible community with us.
3. Ringmaster
Amanda tipped me off to a podcast Iād never heard of before: Behind the Bastards. Every week they do a deep-dive into the biography of a bad person.
They have just wrapped up a six-part series on Vince McMahon and Iām here to tell you that itās glorious. Absolutely worth your time and filled with wrestling stories and trivia. Itās my Memorial Day gift to you.
Thereās a YouTube version of the show if you prefer your podcasts that way.
And you can feel good about supporting these guys: The podcast is free, but if you listen they ask you to support the Portland Diaper Bank, which is a great charity.
Here is a thing I never understand about internet supporters: Their analysis seems to line up with their preferences something like 95 percent of the time. How does that work? I go through life assuming that the thing I hope happens is always going to be a longshot.
The one outlier here is abortion and fair enough. If abortion is your first, second, and third issue, then the difference between the two parties is clear.
But on the issue of ālife,ā the Republican partyās behavior regarding COVID has proven that what it cares about is the practice of abortion and not a true culture of life, in the sense that every single unrepeatable human soul possesses equal and inherent dignity, no matter the external circumstances. (Ditto the Republican partyās immovable stance on guns and palpable thirst for executions.)
I'm wondering if I'm an outlier here. I have usually described myself as "left of left of center," and even this represented a serious move to the right as I aged from 1960s radicalism through just "Leftist" and "Liberal" to where I stand now. But I started reading Tom Nichols on that other platform and he was kind of a gateway drug, you know? And before I realized it I was reading Charlie Sykes (probably seeing him regularly on MSNBC made it safe) and then the Bulwark crew and I'm always the better for it. I actually pay money for it. I enjoy everyone's ideas and humor and humanity. You're not ogres, for chrissakes. I don't agree with everything you say, but I don't think any of it comes from less than genuine convictions or some dark night of the soul. And it makes me yearn for an opposition party consisting largely of folks like you, with whom my chosen political party could debate, and disagree, and then go for a stiff drink and start over again. But the opposition party today opposes everything decent, rational, compassionate, and fair. They're sliding toward authoritarianism like mud down a steep hillside in Malibu after a monsoon. I reveled in your post-Twitter-Cluster-Fuck-DeSantis-Rollout trolling. Great stuff! Way better than the weak tea served up by most of the Dems, who continue to hold their fire when the war's already in full swing.
Anyway, I feel as though I've found a real community of minds here on Substack, not always of one mind, thank god, but almost always thoughtful and worth my time. Wouldn't it be great if this comity could be elevated to RL?
Thanks. Keep on being committed to truth, democracy, and decency. And doing it with such aplomb.
I think āour sonā is really āmy husbandā and āThe Bulwarkā is really āSusan from next door.ā