Gary North - January 20, 2017
Donald Trump's inaugural address is going to go down
in history as one of the great ones.
I say this as a man with 59 years of public speaking
experience and a Ph.D. in American history.
There have only been three inaugural addresses that
have come down through the ages. The first was Lincoln's second inaugural, with
the phrase: ". . . with malice towards none, with charity for all."
The second was Franklin Roosevelt's first inaugural: "We have nothing to
fear but fear itself." The third was John Kennedy's: "Ask not what
your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country." These
are legendary phrases.
But Trump's speech was different from any previous
inaugural address. He spoke directly to his political base. He did not try to
pull the country together in some kind of vague, pie-in-the-sky, common-ground
political rhetoric. He threw down the gauntlet from the very beginning.
Standing in front of the Capitol building, surrounded by former Presidents and
politicians, he said that everything they had done in the past has been a way
to extract power from the American people and to feather their own nests. This,
of course, is exactly what they have done. Nobody had ever said this before in
an inaugural address.
He made it clear that this is a turning point. Again,
always in the past inaugural addresses have called for unity. He did not call
for unity in general. He called for unity on his terms, governed by his agenda.
He called for the transfer of power from the halls of Washington back to the
people. The rhetoric was confrontational to a degree that I would not have
expected.
Today's ceremony, however, has a very special meaning
because today we are not merely transferring power from one administration to
another or from one party to another, but we are transferring power from
Washington, D.C., and giving it back to you, the people.
For too long, a small group in our nation's capital
has reaped the rewards of government while the people have bore the cost.
Washington flourished, but the people did not share in its wealth. Politicians
prospered but the jobs left and the factories closed.
The establishment protected itself, but not the
citizens of our country. Their victories have not been your victories. Their
triumphs have not been your triumphs. And while they celebrated in our nation's
capital, there was little to celebrate for struggling families all across our
land.
That all changes starting right here and right now,
because this moment is your moment.
It belongs to you.
He took no prisoners. He offered no olive branch. He
used the media to go directly to his political base. This was basically an
extension of what he does on Twitter every day.
The media and the establishment have never dealt with
anything like this before. Technologically, it could not have been done before
2004. Ideologically, no one wanted to do it. But he just did it.
This is populism, pure and simple. No populist has
ever had the opportunity to deliver a populist inaugural address.
I think the inaugural address is going to bite him. He
made promises that he will not be able to keep. The Washington political
structure, let alone the Washington bureaucracy, will not let his promises come
true. But at least in full public view, he announced them. He made it clear
what he expects to be able to accomplish as President, and he promised not to
betray the people -- his political base.
He is rich enough, and independent enough, and
cantankerous enough that he may not get stuck in the swamps of political
compromise. It sounds as though he has no intention of going along in order to
get along. He recognizes that his election was like nothing in the history of
the United States. He was a man with no experience whatsoever in politics, and
he was elected President of the United States. Politically speaking, he doesn't
owe anything to anybody. He comes into the office with no strings attached.
This has never happened in American political history, and it is extremely rare
historically, except in cases of conquering generals.
I don't know which phrase will get quoted in the
future. But I'll tell you one that grabbed my attention: "This American
carnage stops right here and stops right now." American carnage.
He has it, exactly.
But this is more likely to stick: "From this
moment on, it's going to be America First."
He is not the polished speaker that John Kennedy was.
He does not have the hearts of the people in the way that Franklin Roosevelt
did in the midst of the Great Depression. He is not the rhetorical master that
Abraham Lincoln was. But more than any President I have ever heard or read at
an inaugural, he laid out his agenda, showed how that agenda is a fundamental
break from the political past, and promised his supporters that he would not
betray them. The implication is obvious: previous Presidents have all
betrayed them. And they have. Four of them were standing behind him when he
said it. This was a breach of etiquette. I loved it.
No matter what happens in terms of the details of his
administration, and no matter what happens to the economy as a result of
central bank profligacy, Donald Trump delivered an inaugural address that is
going to go down in history. His enemies will try to bury him in his own words.
But that plays into his hands. They will have to use his own words to bury him.
It's Catch-22 for the establishment.
Let the battle begin!
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