Why the growing talk on the U.S. right of a âregimeâ in America? Laura K. Field on an emergent idea shaping the politics of the Republican Party. Languages of Fear Why the growing talk on the U.S. right of a âregimeâ in America? Laura K. Field on an emergent idea shaping the politics of the Republican Party. [Norbert Kowalczyk]( Norbert Kowalczyk After Hurricane Ian devastated Florida in late September, the U.S. stateâs Republican governor Ron DeSantis used some unusual language to criticize American press coverage of the storm. He said the ânational regime mediaâ had wanted to see Ian hit the city of Tampa, which ended up largely spared, because that outcome would have been âworse for Floridaâ and helped the media to âpursue their political agenda.â DeSantisâ claims were strange and baselessâthereâs no evidence that journalists were rooting for harm to Tampa or anyplace elseâbut they were also part of a trend among politicians and others on the right in America to speak of ominous âregimeâ thatâs both opposed to their party and subverting their country. Far-right members of the U.S. House of Representativesâsuch as Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, and Paul Gosarâhave been railing against the âBiden regime,â but many more across the American right argue that an oppressive regime extends far beyond government to the press, universities, nongovernmental organizations, and âwokeâ corporations. Ohioâs Republican Senate nominee J.D. Vance claimed that the far-right media personality and conspiracy theories Alex Jones was âcensored by the regime.â The former Trump national security official Michael Anton has described a âregimeâ composing âthe people who really run the United States of America.â What are they talking about? Laura K. Field is a scholar-in-residence at American University and a senior fellow at the Niskanen Center in Washington. Field says the adoption of the language of âthe regimeâ has quickly become a kind of catch-all term among people in quarters of the American right for any number of political and cultural power centers that they perceive to be working against them and wielding power illegitimacy. As Field sees it, the rising popularity of the term is an indicator of how radical ideas are migrating from the far-right fringe of politics into the mainstreamâoften popularized by niche intellectuals and other ideological entrepreneurs and then embraced by politicians, media commentators, and other influencers. Field notes that many of these figures have tried to articulate intellectual frameworks to support Donald Trumpâs politics since 2016 and are now working to develop a form of right-wing populism that can outlast Trump. Itâs a populism thatâs centered on their understanding of Americaâs distinctive history and strengths but that also now targets some of Americaâs core institutionsâand shows signs of potentially even rejecting the countryâs liberal-democratic system itself. âââ Graham Vyse: Whatâs âthe regimeâ? Laura K. Field: Social scientists commonly use the term regime to refer to a system of government, but we havenât much heard this term in mainstream U.S. political conversation until quite recently. Itâs now being taken up by a constellation of politicians, public commentators, and intellectuals aligned with Donald Trumpâa broad group often labeled âthe new rightââwhoâve started giving the term a specific, negative, even cynical, new meaning in the American context. They mean it to portray the Biden administration as an effectively authoritarian government colluding with progressives who control the media, the universities, and a âwokeâ elite that dominates the corporations. Thereâs a clearly sinister edge to the rhetoric, tying in with the falsehood that the 2020 election was stolen and Bidenâs government is fraudulentâwhile also conveying a broader sense that the left is exerting despotic power over Americans, and against Republicans in particular, in all kinds of illegitimate ways. Itâs very all-encompassing and, notably, very threatening. Vyse: Where did the rhetoric come from? [Advertisement]( Advertisement Field: Thereâve been different variations of if on the American right over the past few years. Take Trumpâs 1776 Commission, for example. The Commission report used the word regime a number of times to describe tendencies on the leftâincluding reference to âidentity politicsâ as a âregime of formal inequalityâ and âa regime of rewards and privileges assigned according to group identity.â [Also known as the 1776 Project, this advisory committee, formed late in the Trump administration, created a report on âpatriotic educationâ responding to The New York Timesâ 1619 Project, which had argued that the âtrue foundingâ of the United States was the year American slavery began.] This language was very similar to what youâd hear from the Claremont Institute, a research and advocacy organization in California that describes itself as working to restore Americaâs founding principlesâand that had close ties to the Trump administration. [Michael Anton, a senior fellow at Claremont, is a former Trump national security official. John Eastman, the founding director of Claremont Instituteâs Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence and another senior fellow, was the lawyer who helped Trump rationalize his attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election results.] Thereâs a strong tendency among those at a place like the Claremont Institute to view the United States as having been fundamentally transformed by progressivismâand to see themselves as counter-revolutionaries working to bring things back to a more authentic American condition. Then thereâs a group of religious traditionalistsâsometimes referring to themselves as âpost-liberalsââwho also use this language of the regime. Patrick Deneen, a Notre Dame professor and the author of Why Liberalism Failed, has a forthcoming book called Regime Change: Toward a Postliberal Future. So itâs not necessarily just rhetoric; some of those using the language have big ideas about changing politics. Some post-liberal Catholics, for example, are outspoken in their support of Hungaryâs very illiberal Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Some groups, such as the National Conservatism organization, promote a populist economic nationalism. [Olesya Yemets]( Olesya Yemets More from Laura K. Field at The Signal: âWhen Trump took power, he didnât display a clear sense of what he stood for politically beyond the rhetoric of his presidential campaign. In that context, there were various right-wing intellectuals who identified with the essential politics of Trumpâs campaign and offered ideas about what it might ultimately stand forâand arguments for these ideas. It will always sound absurd to many liberals and other Trump opponents that there would be an intellectual component to Trumpism, but thatâs what these intellectuals have tried to fosterâand some of them have been effective at it, drawing on a lot of knowledge about American history and political theory. Theyâve been able to find ways to rationalize, and sometimes justifiably defend, what Trump-era Republicans have been trying to doâeven if the intellectual weight of it all didnât always come through in what Trump would say.â âThis thinking suggests that votes for Trump donât matter, because the whole system has been taken over by illegitimate forces outside votersâ control. Thereâs an implicit call to action in the argumentâto radical, even possibly violent actionâto stop whatâs going on. If you genuinely believe that people donât have the control they should have over their government in a democracy, thereâs a tacit imperative in the logic of that belief to upend the system. Itâs a kind of logic that led to the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol..â âThereâs some truth to the idea that liberals or progressives have more cultural clout than conservatives in Americaâthat Hollywood has a liberal or progressive bias, and many mainstream news sources and universities do too. But this conspiratorial notion of a regime that includes the government, corporations, and law enforcement all colluding to oppress Republicans says something very differentâand fundamentally absurd. There may be a hardening of language on both sides of the American political divide, but itâs important to distinguish which parts of that reflect reality and which donât.â [The Signal]( explores urgent questions in current events around the worldâto support it and for full access: The Signal | 1717 N St. NW, Washington, DC 20011 [Unsubscribe {EMAIL}](
[Constant Contact Data Notice](
Sent by newsletters@thesgnl.email