Are We Going to Be OK? On Donald Trump, MAGA, and America
On the latest episode of Inside the Hive, Jeff Sharlet suggests that thereâs a way in which Donald Trump âwon this election on January 6, 2021.â
âThat seems counterintuitive, right? Because thatâs this moment when, for a brief period, even his own party renounces him,â Sharlet says. âA lot of attention is going on [Attorney General] Merrick Garlandâs schedule and pressing charges, in which weâre still imagining that Trumpism is a system thatâs working within the rule of law. And on January 6, thatâs just a profound pivot point.â Sharlet, an author and Vanity Fair contributing editor, who has written extensively on what he calls the âTrumpocene,â or age of Trump, said that January 6 was when âwe go from the period of conspiracy theories to the age of martyrdom, which is powerful stuff.â
Sharlet, along with Vanity Fair editor in chief Radhika Jones, shared their gut-level reactions to Trumpâs defeat of Kamala Harris, while also discussing the language of fascism and the role of identity politics in the 2024 race.
Jones mentions how the Harris campaign was ânot really emphasizing the historic nature of her run, that she would be the first woman president, that she would be the first woman of color to be president,â presumably because of how Hillary Clintonâs âIâm with herâ strategy fared in 2016. But âthe identity politics were happening on the GOP side,â Jones says, noting how the courting and messaging, from the likes of Stephen Miller and Elon Musk, were toward men. âNow, male identity, thatâs a big group, I grant you,â she says, âbut that was the drive.â
In approaching a second Trump administration, Jones says that whatâs most important is separating âthe distractions from whatâs actually happening in substance,â to not allow Trump to easily shift attention. âWhat is going to happen to government agencies that we depend on day-to-day?â she asks. âWhat is going to happen at the border? Will there be mass deportation? Will the fluoride come out of our water? There are issues that will affect the body politic, and I would like our attention to be trained on those.â
Sharlet says that âpart of what Trump has taken advantage of is this great extinction event in news organizations, the death of local news,â and suggests âlooking at the granularâ at how policies are affecting people. âWhere are they tinkering in these small places that seem boring and insignificant, but, you know, as Project 2025 taught us, and which the Trump movement has reclaimed today, there were people paying attention to those small agencies and what can be done with them? And how [is that] going to play out in this county in OmahaâŠor that town in New Jersey?â
As for covering the MAGA movement, Sharlet suggests âpaying attention to abstraction and metaphor.â
âThe really frustrating thing with how we covered this campaign is there was a way in which Trump wasâas a fascist movement evolves, it gets into a richer and richer body of myth and metaphor, and thatâs what theyâre working with. And in response, we have democracy becoming further and further detached, so that democracy becomes this vague term, like free speech becomes a term.â
âIt falls on us, as people who want to resist fascism, and as journalists who want to cover it, to really dig deep and translate and interpret that language and find out what democracy means,â he adds. âWhen I talk to Trumpers, what democracy means is a kingâa king that is chosen by both God and the people. A very different idea than what we have in the Constitution.â