The Randian Republican who could rein in Trump isn’t a coward … – New Statesman

Posted: May 26, 2017 at 4:31 am

Poor ol Paul Ryan. For a few brief hourson 27 January, a week after the inauguration of Donald Trump, the Wikipedia entry for invertebrates which defines them as animals that neither possess nor develop a vertebral column(commonly known as a backbone or spine) was amended to include a smiling picture of the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives.

The online prank reflected a growing consensus among critics of Ryan: confronted by a boorish and authoritarian president plagued by multiple conflicts of interest, the House Speaker has behaved in a craven and spineless manner. Ryan, goes the conventional wisdom, is a coward.

Yet as is so often the case, the conventional wisdom is wrong. Ryans deafening silence over Trumps egregious excesses has little to do with pusillanimity. Its much worse than that. The House Speaker is not acoward; he is a shameless opportunist. Hisrefusal to condemn Trump is not caused by terror or fear; rather, it is a cynical,self-serving tactic.

Long before Trump arrived on the scene with his wacky birther conspiracies, Ryan was the undisputed star of the GOP; the earnest, number-crunching wunderkind of the right. He was elected to Congress in 1998, aged 28; by 2011, he was head of the House budget committee; by 2012, he was Mitt Romneys running mate; by 2015, he was Speaker of the House and third in line for the presidency at the grand old age of 45.

The Wisconsin congressman has been hailed in the conservative media as the man with a plan, the intellectual leader of the Republican Party, the conscience of the GOP. Yet, again and again, in recent years, he has been singularly unsuccessful in enacting his legislative agenda.

And what kind of agenda might that be? Why, an Ayn Rand-inspired agenda, of course. You know Rand, right? The hero ofmodern-day libertarians, self-described radical for capitalism and author of the dystopian novel Atlas Shrugged. As one of her acolytes wrote to her: You have the courage to tell the masses what no politician told them: you are inferior and all the improvements in your condition which yousimply take for granted you owe to the effort of men who are better than you.

Ryan is an ideologue who insists on giving copies of Atlas Shrugged to interns in his congressional office. In 2005 he told a gathering of Rand fans, called the Atlas Society, that the reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand.

Rolling back the evil state while balancing the budget on the backs of the feckless poor, in true Randian fashion, has always been Ryans primary goal. Even Newt Gingrich, who served as Republican House Speaker for five years in the 1990s, once decried Ryans proposals to privatise Medicare the popular federal health insurance programme that covers people over the age of 65 as right-wing social engineering.

These days, Ryan has a useful idiot in the White House to help him pull off the right-wing social engineering that he couldnt pull off on his own. Trump, who doesnt do detail or policy, is content, perhaps even keen, to outsource his domestic agenda to the policy wonk from Wisconsin.

The Speaker has made his deal with the devil: a reckless and racist demagogue, possibly in cahoots with Russia, can trample over the law, erode US democratic norms and embarrass the country, and the party, at home and abroad. And in return? Ryan gets top-rate tax cuts. To hell with theconstitution.

Trump, lest we forget, ran as an insurgent against the Republican establishment during the primaries, loudly breaking with hard-right GOP orthodoxy on issues such as infrastructure spending (Trump promised more), health-care reform (Trump promised coverage for all) and Medicaid (Trump promised no cuts). It was all a charade, a con. And Ryan knew it. The Speaker may have been slow to endorse Trump but when he did so, last June, he made it clear that on the issues that make up our agenda, we have more common ground thandisagreement.

A year later, Ryan has been vindicated: free trade deals aside, Trump is governing as a pretty conventional, hard-right conservative. Consider the first important budget proposal from the Trump administration, published on 23 May. For Ryan, its a Randian dream come true: $800bn slashed from Medicaid, which provides health care to low-income Americans, plus swingeing cuts to Snap (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Programme, aka food stamps), Chip (the Childrens Health Insurance Programme) and SSDI (disability insurance).

In Trump, Ryan and his fellow anti-government hardliners in Congress have found the perfect frontman to enact their reverse-Robin Hood economic agenda: a self-declared, rhetorical champion of white, working-class voters whose actual Ryan-esque policies on tax cuts, health care, Wall Street regulation and the rest bolster only the billionaire class at their expense.

Dont be distracted by all thescandals: the president has been busy using his tiny hands to sign a wide array of bills, executive orders and judicial appointments that have warmed the cold hearts of the Republican hard right.

Impeachment, therefore, remains a liberal fantasy despite everything were discovering about Russia, Michael Flynn, James Comey and the rest. Does anyone seriously expect this Republican-dominated House of Representatives to bring articles of impeachment against Trump? With Paul Ryan in charge of it? Dont. Be. Silly.

Mehdi Hasan is a broadcaster and New Statesman contributing editor. He is based inWashington, DC

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The Randian Republican who could rein in Trump isn't a coward ... - New Statesman

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