New York Post

Miracle on Pa. erases old Trump playbook

- MARTIN GURRI

Miracle on Pa. erases old Trump playbook

THE image taken by photograph­er Evan Vucci is so perfect, at first I thought it was doctored. Donald Trump, larger than life, stretches toward the sky in the act of shaking a defiant fist, bloodied but still formidable, still a fighter, while an enormous American flag covers the background and, in the foreground, a female Secret Service agent hugs the former president in a moving mater dolorosa pose.

It’s a brilliant triangular compositio­n in the best Renaissanc­e style. The murderous assassinat­ion attempt in Butler, Pa., will always be remembered because of it. The central subject, Trump, will never be the same.

The people who hate Trump do so to an insane degree and see him as a sort of biblical monster, an antichrist come to inaugurate the End of Days. I will have more to say about them in a moment.

But there are a few of us who haven’t loved Trump for the opposite reason: the unbearable lightness of being that attached itself to his actions.

Trump is a creature of popular culture — a terrific entertaine­r in the modern manner. He’s funny in a weird, unsettling way, he’s vulgar when he’s supposed to be respectful, and he’s comically vicious to his antagonist­s.

Old showman routine

The whole act seems devised to attract attention to himself in all times and places — something he has been extraordin­arily successful in accomplish­ing. Trump’s followers can’t get enough of him. His detractors are even worse.

The man has been with us for eight years as a dominant public figure. In that span, he has demonstrat­ed strong political skills but few visible moral virtues. He doesn’t drink. He seems to be a good father.

Otherwise he comes across as a rich hedonistic loudmouth who has allowed few principles to interfere with life’s many pleasures.

That’s not a disqualifi­er. The country had a solid eight years with the incorrigib­le Bill Clinton — leadership skills or even dumb luck can sometimes compensate for personal weakness.

We need them to be high and straight. We need, in the flawed human who embodies the office, some exemplary quality, some grace beyond ambition, to justify the public’s trust.

That’s what the deadly shooting

at Butler, and the perfect image that will forever capture the moment, have done for Trump.

In a few seconds of violence, an uncanny transforma­tion took place. Surrounded by death and stark terror, with blood flowing from a wounded ear, Trump displayed truly admirable courage and command.

His gesture of defiance reassured the MAGA multitudes around him and also those watching afterwards — reassured them not only that he was physically unimpaired but, more importantl­y, that the fight his presidenti­al campaign represente­d to them was still on.

He took the rage of his supporters over the episode and converted

it into pride. By doing so, he may well have prevented our country from tipping over into the abyss.

The entertaine­r has risen above himself. Of course, the old narcissist is still there.

Trump will continue to say things that drive his opponents crazy and make his well-wishers cringe. People rarely change their style even under altered circumstan­ces.

But after Butler, nothing can be quite the same. Most of us feel the difference, although we find it hard to put into words.

The closest I can come to it is this: Trump has been reframed. He has become a living symbol, a protesting fist raised to the sky

for millions of Americans who wish to assert their equality against the predations of the ruling elites.

The cheesy golden escalator and the Mar-a-Lago glitter have been left behind — and Trump, strange to say, is approachin­g the realm of myth.

The shift at the RNC

At the Republican National Convention that began in Milwaukee only 48 hours after he was shot, the former president seemed aware that he now stood on a different plane. He looked pensive and subdued.

His speech on Thursday at the convention revealed an unsuspecte­d

human side to an abrasive man. “I’m not supposed to be here,” he said, his voice catching with emotion.

In a strangely reverentia­l gesture, he kissed the fireman’s helmet belonging to Corey Comperator­e, who had been killed while protecting his family in the Butler firefight.

The speech teemed with positive exhortatio­ns: “We are Americans. Ambition is our heritage. Greatness is our birthright . . . It is a story of love, sacrifice, and so many other things.”

Although he rambled on for 92 minutes, Trump, possibly for the first time in his life, managed to say nothing that was shocking or controvers­ial.

All this is terrible news to the institutio­nal actors — starting with the administra­tion but including journalist­s, academics and movie stars — who have dedicated the last eight years to inventing ever more extreme expression­s of horror and hatred on the subject of Trump.

I’m not going to compile a list of what has been said and done. Others more patient than I am have taken up this task. Let me recommend my favorite: Matt Taibbi. But a bare summary makes extraordin­ary reading.

Those who feel politicall­y threatened by the former president have impeached him twice, indicted him on a shotgun spray of charges in four separate jurisdicti­ons,

convicted him of a crime few Americans could describe.

They have tried to drive him to bankruptcy, silenced him with a gag order, restricted his mobility, arbitraril­y removed his name from the ballot.

Comparison­s to Hitler are so routine as to be farcical: the most recent cover of TNR shows a portrait of Trump sprouting a Hitler mustache and morphing into the German dictator.

In a depressing burst of infantile nihilism, several commentato­rs have called for Trump to be killed.

The campaign of vilificati­on is unparallel­ed in my lifetime, and it has had an obvious political purpose.

Trump, we are told, isn’t merely wrong or bad. He’s an abominatio­n: the Antichrist. All decent persons have a sacred duty not just to oppose but to destroy him.

‘Deplorable’ canard

To this end, he must be walled off in a moral ghetto that only “deplorable­s” will wish to enter: degenerate­s who are willing to be labeled “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophob­ic — you name it,” in Hilary Clinton’s famous formula.

Afraid of the social consequenc­es, many Trump supporters have kept their opinions to themselves.

That, too, has changed after Butler. The walls of the ghetto

have come tumbling down.

Calling for the destructio­n of a wounded target of assassinat­ion is, to put it mildly, not a good look. President Biden pulled his campaign advertisem­ent off the air — we can guess how Trump was portrayed in those ads.

Left-leaning MSNBC temporaril­y suspended its rabidly antiTrump “Morning Joe” program. Facebook suddenly felt the urge to restore Trump’s account because Americans “should be able to hear from the nominees for President on the same basis.”

The former president’s adherents began to emerge from the catacombs. Elon Musk formally endorsed Trump on the very day of the shooting. So did hedgefund billionair­e Bill Ackman. The endorsemen­t of Silicon Valley legend Marc Andreessen came during the convention.

MAGA hats proliferat­ed in progressiv­e San Francisco, while in deep blue Manhattan a spontaneou­s cavalcade, American flags flying from the vehicles, celebrated noisily in front of Trump Tower.

To the extent that Trump has merged with Vucci’s mythical image of him, Trumpism has been normalized. And to the extent that Trumpism is normalized, the Democratic Party and its nominee are deprived of the Trump-isHitler narrative that was, at the same time, the highest dogma of the progressiv­e church and the single issue on which they were prepared to gamble the November election.

Trump doesn’t even need heroic status. If voters just perceive him as a regular politician rather than a mad dictator, the Democrats are left with nothing.

Because of this, many observers have come to believe that the presidenti­al election was decided amid the bloodshed at Butler. “The presidenti­al contest ended last night,” said a “veteran Democratic consultant.” “It’s over,” mourned another despairing Democrat. Conversely, the Republican­s celebratin­g in Milwaukee looked confident to the point of certainty.

Partisan impasse

This is an error, for at least two reasons.

First, the country remains sharply divided with few voters to be persuaded either way: people’s minds were made up long ago.

Even after President Biden was exposed as a confused and incoherent senior in his debate with Trump, and after the latter’s epic reaction at Butler, the opinion polls moved very slightly.

Second, if there’s anything the last few weeks have taught us, it’s the power of events to obliterate convention­al wisdom.

There are wars raging abroad and terrorists eager to pounce at home. Biden will now be replaced with a more vigorous Democratic candidate.

Four months are left before Election Day — in the Internet age, an eternity. Anything can happen.

The significan­ce of the events at Butler, and of the images from that awful day, is that they have shifted the course of the electoral campaign in an unexpected direction.

Trump will be harder to demonize. That is unquestion­ably to his advantage.

The race isn’t over — but it has been reframed.

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 ?? ?? SEARING IMAGE: A wounded former President Donald Trump raises a fist as he’s shielded by Secret Service agents after sniper fire erupted at his Butler, Pa., rally on July 13. Just two days later, Trump seemed a changed man and candidate at the Republican National Convention.
SEARING IMAGE: A wounded former President Donald Trump raises a fist as he’s shielded by Secret Service agents after sniper fire erupted at his Butler, Pa., rally on July 13. Just two days later, Trump seemed a changed man and candidate at the Republican National Convention.
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