The Palm Beach Post

Trump campaign exudes a ‘Game of Thrones’ vibe

- Charles M. Blow

Donald Trump has surrounded himself with ideologica­l shape-shifters — former Democrats and former anti-Trumpers willing to profess a fawning loyalty to him. One wouldn’t be wrong to think that this results in a treacherou­s environmen­t. But Trump prefers this sort of snake pit because he understand­s snakes.

The New York Times reported that Trump plans to name Tulsi Gabbard and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who both recently endorsed him, as honorary co-chairs of his presidenti­al transition team. These two are only the latest onetime opponents Trump has pulled into his orbit. Many of his Republican primary challenger­s from 2016 and 2024 became sycophants. Some of his most vocal critics in Congress have become his confidants. Even his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, once wrote that the former president “is cultural heroin” and behind closed doors called him “America’s Hitler.”

Trump embraces people who will swallow their words and bury their beliefs. He seems to like people to demonstrat­e that their conviction­s are hollow. A parade of former Trump administra­tion officials has condemned him or refused to endorse him, but he and his supporters dismiss them as turncoats. In a certain light, they have a point: Trump hasn’t changed, and these now critics knew — or should have known — who he was when they accepted their posts.

Many Americans may not fully appreciate how much like “Game of Thrones” Washington politics is, how intoxicati­ng political power can be, how proximity to that power orders society. I believe that part of Donald Trump’s genius wasn’t really genius at all but simply the clarity of an outsider who exploited the cravenness of much of our political culture.

Trump understood this social jockeying: He’s from New York, where he rose on the fringes of high society because he was too crass to be invited into it. His rise was propelled by, among other things, a hit television show, an assortment of cameo appearance­s in film and on television, a string of co-written books and being lionized in rap lyrics.

Trump has turned the Republican Party — and much of Washington — into his real-life game of “The Apprentice,” with various figures making expedient alliances, trying desperatel­y to avoid eliminatio­n and all competing for his approval. Washington, to Trump, is a survivalis­t game, and in it, compromisi­ng oneself is a small price to pay for survival. In this game there are no victims. The pawns all play willingly. They abandon their morals and ethics of their own volition. They have seen the calamity Trump has brought to the lives of others who cross over to his side. Yet, they follow suit.

On Sunday in an interview on Fox News, Kennedy said, “I think President Trump is going to make a series of announceme­nts about other Democrats who are joining his campaign, and you know, I want to make America healthy again, and so does President Trump.”

Now, Kennedy blows a lot of smoke, but the idea that Trump would make America healthy again is too much to take.

When it comes to literal health, he failed as president to take the COVID-19 pandemic seriously and tried his best to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Metaphoric­ally, he threatens to reshape government as we know it — something Kennedy seemed to recognize in 2020, when he said that in many ways, Trump “discredite­d the American experiment with self-governance.” Ditto Gabbard, who once called him “corrupt” and “unqualifie­d to serve.”

But they don’t care about the obvious contradict­ions. They’re playing the game. Trump wanted the fraction of support Kennedy drew and the imprimatur of a former Democratic congresswo­man. In exchange, he’ll grant them some marginal role and a trifle of power by associatio­n. Unless and until he takes it away: “Ron DeSanctimo­nious,” anyone?

Washington, by some measures, is the most important city in the country. By others, it is the shallowest. Trump has exposed many of the city’s players as apostates and built his Republican Party with these people at the core.

Charles M. Blow is a columnist for The New York Times.

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