Matthew Yglesias explains on
vox.com.
A broad range of perfectly mainstream Republican Party politicians — Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana, House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Attorney General Pam Bondi of Florida, and so forth — revealed a political party that completely apart from Trump is utterly debauched.
Not everything in American conservatism is toxic, but the convention has revealed a profound and genuinely unusual intellectual and moral rot in the Republican Party. A weakness for outlandish conspiracies and a preference for talk radio antics over the necessarily-somewhat-dull work of practical politics. Trump is not so much the cause of this rot as the man who simply has the daring to punch the tree and send it tumbling down. The run-of-the-mill elected officials and the rank-and-file delegates who cheered them on did the damage.
Lost in the debate over the propriety of the convention’s loud and lusty "lock her up" chants, for example, has been insufficient focus on the basic ridiculousness of the argument.
Hillary Clinton’s email server, after all, has already been extensively investigated by a team of FBI agents and federal prosecutors. She’s not going to be locked up because she’s not going to be put on trial because James Comey, a Republican and George W. Bush administration veteran, determined that given the facts "no reasonable prosecutor would file charges."
Under the circumstances, why on earth should she be locked up? Are Comey and the whole FBI in on the cover-up? Why?
They don’t know and they don’t care to ask. Or they do know and they just don’t care that they’re wrong. Or something.
There is a palpable discomfort with Trump among many of the establishment politicians who are supporting his presidential campaign.
Ryan’s speech introducing Pence lavished praise on his character and commitment to conservative ideas that were entirely absent from his main address to the convention. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell delivered a rote statement that electing Trump would be good because it would let senate Republicans govern. Even loopier speeches from elected officials like Christie or Florida Gov. Rick Scott didn’t dwell on making Mexico pay for a wall, banning Muslim immigration, opening up libel laws, abrogating NATO and NAFTA or other signature Trump themes.
But these establishment speeches were, on their own terms, fairly bonkers.
Their slams on Clinton veered, repeatedly, into tinfoil hat territory. They were completely out of touch with the state of the economic recovery. They relied heavily on the idea that President Obama could defeat ISIS through rote incantation of magic words ("radical Islamic terrorism"). And while they avoided most of Trump’s big crazy policy ideas, they did so mostly by avoiding speaking about any policy ideas at all.
The problem wasn’t Trump’s relatives or Scott Baio, it was largely the delegates themselves. Rank and file activists reared on a generation’s worth of Rush Limbaugh and Fox News through a pathetic conclave in which governors and senators stooped to talk radio antics in a desperate quest for applause, only to be trounced by Laura Ingraham — a real deal talk radio host who, even more than Trump himself, perfectly captured the mood of a party that’s become completely indifferent to the work of governance.
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