I’ve been thinking about Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) lately. He came to my attention right after the 2024 general election, as Nehls accepted Trump as the leader of the Republican Party.
“So now he’s got a mission statement. His mission, his goals and objectives, whatever that is — we need to embrace it. All of it, every single word,” Nehls told Capitol Hill reporters in a clip that aired on MSNBC.
“If Donald Trump says, ‘Jump three feet high and scratch your head,’ we all jump three feet high and scratch our heads. That’s it,” he added.
Yeah, the heck with representing your constituents and protecting the Constitution. But seriously, why even bother with a Congress?
This morning I read a post at Public Notice by Tom Schaller call The Vanity Presidency. Trump is “turning the whole country into a tacky branded property,” Schaller says. It begins this way —
Following the failed attempt on President Trump’s life at the White House Correspondents Dinner, lapdog Republicans and their media allies rushed to capitalize by arguing that the episode proves his very unpopular White House ballroom project has always been about presidential safety, not a self-glorifying tribute to himself.
“Everyone thought this was Trump making a monument to Trump. This is a vanity project,” the reliably smarmy Sen. Lindsey Graham snorted at Trump’s critics. (Graham wants to spend taxpayer dollars on the ballroom project, which he describes as “very national security-centric.
At this point Trump is little but a walking freak show, albiet one with a big military. His power comes from the fact that so many others prop him up and protect him. And in a lot of ways that’s the real story here.
The social psychologists tell us that political conservatives tend to value loyalty much more than liberals. You can find groupthink all along the political spectrum, but righties are more likely to assume all goodness emanates from the Right and the Left is just evil and possibly insane. Political lefties tend to be more willing to criticize their own and can give credit to conservatives who appear to be rational.
Some of this is baked into the emotional and psychological impulses that tilt people toward conservatism or liberalism. And I’m not saying there have never been political conservatives who are capable of critical thinking. Of course there have been, but where are they now? MAGA has zero tolerance for independent critical thinking. Instead we get variations of Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas).
Do see Historical Roots and Psychology of Liberals, Conservatives by Gina Simmons Schneider, Ph.D., at Psychology Today. Liberals and conservatives really are wired differently. Liberalism is aspirational; conservatism is defensive. Studies have shown that conservatives tend to be far less tolerant of ambiguity than liberals, and more likely to be fearful of change or unfamiliar circumstances. They like certainly and consistency. And this is why conservatism, taken to extremes, becomes reactionary.
I tend to think that admitting to not-knowing is the beginning of wisdom. If you know you don’t know, you can learn. If you can’t recognize not knowing, you automatically fill in the blank spots with whatever is available at the time. Humans are wired to connect mental dots to understand the world, but if we aren’t careful we often connect the wrong dots. The truly wise are people who can refrain from dot-connecting without sufficient knowledge.
So in a lot of ways political liberals and conservatives are approaching politics and issues from very different perspectives. But the knee-jerk conformity and denial of reality on today’s Right is giving Trump room to function, and screw up, and hurt people. And while there’s always been some of that, it’s worse now.
I can remember the Republican party fifty years ago. There was a spectrum, everything from the patrician, anti-progressive Old Right to Rockefeller Republicans to the segregationist Dixiecrats. Now they’re more like the Borg Collective. Nearly the entire party is prepared to jump three feet and scratch their heads on command.
And I believe this assimilation to the Borg predates MAGA. I think it’s something that’s been happening for a while. Back in the 1950s there was McCarthyism and the House Committee on Un-American Activities and a lot of craziness generally. But there was also Dwight Eisenhower, a Republican. I didn’t agree with everything he did, but he was psychologically normal and not a fearful sort of person. So while that tendency has been on the Right possibly since there has been a Right, the Republican party (which used to be the more liberal party, remember) had a big enough mix of people to be able to function as a party. Now it’s just Borg.
Trump is not going to last forever. A lot depends on the midterms, but I question whether he’s going to stay in office for the entire second term. But how can the current Republican party move on? Back when Nixon resigned there were several strong personalities in the party who had not been Nixon yes-men. These included Nelson Rockefeller, Barry Goldwater (I didn’t say I liked them), and John Anderson. Ronald Reagan was governor of California by then, I believe. Gerald Ford wasn’t necessarily a Nixon guy in spite of being his veep, briefly.
But — just speculating here — if Trump were removed from office next year, taking whatever Trumpism is with him, who among the spineless sycophants in the Republican party will be able to reconstitute a viable political party out of the wreckage of the GOP?

