david brooks

Conservative mocks Republicans in Congress as 'Trump bobblehead figures'

In an article for The New York Times published Thursday, conservative political commentator David Brooks argued that the Republican Party has surrendered its independence and moral authority by bending entirely to President Donald Trump.

Brooks writes that after decades of ceding power within Congress and to the executive branch, many Republican lawmakers have now effectively given up their own agency, becoming “Trump bobbleheads” more focused on appearing loyal than representing their constituents.

"Today if you are a Republican you have basically given away all your power to Trump. You are a duly elected representative of your constituents, yet you’ve turned yourself into a Trump bobblehead figure who gets to go on Fox News from time to time," Brooks wrote.

He argued that this submission to Trump reflects a broader cultural decay in American democracy: one in which the idea of persuasion has been replaced by the glorification of “fighting.”

Once a rhetorical flourish, the promise to “fight” has, Brooks observed, become a destructive mindset across the political spectrum. Republicans, in particular, have adopted Trump’s combative style, treating politics as warfare rather than deliberation.

The result, he warned, is a form of politics that unleashes “the little fascist in each one of us,” where opponents are to be crushed rather than convinced.

Brooks contrasted this with the democratic ideals of conversation and compromise enshrined in the Constitution, arguing that these values are now dismissed as weakness.

Trump’s rhetoric, he said, is not about persuasion but domination, and Republicans’ eagerness to echo it reveals their abandonment of democratic principles. And Brooks argued that rather than defending the institutions they were elected to uphold, many in the GOP have traded them for a performative loyalty to one man.

'You don't love your country': Conservative exposes 'moral rot at the core of Trumpism'

One prominent conservative writer is now directly calling out both President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance for attacking one of the most distinctive parts of the American identity — the reason servicemen and women fight and die for their country.

In his Thursday column, New York Times columnist David Brooks — a protege of conservative icon William F. Buckley — began by saying that while his mentor often encouraged him to write about "whatever made me angriest this week," he wasn't an angry person and usually didn't use anger as a source of inspiration. However, he said that comments made by Vance and conservative political scientist Patrick Deneen of the University of Notre Dame forced him to heed Buckley's advice: Brooks told readers he was angry in particular that both Deneen and Vance insisted that American military members primarily fight and die not for their country, but for their comrades.

"Of course warriors fight for their comrades. And of course there are some wars like Vietnam, and Iraq, where Vance served, where the moral causes are unclear or discredited," Brooks wrote. "But when the moral stakes are made clear, most soldiers are absolutely motivated in part by ideals — even in the heat of combat."

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The conservative Times columnist went on to cite examples of Civil War soldiers who often wrote letters to family members back home speaking of the importance of preserving the union, and who referenced soldiers who gave their lives in the Revolutionary War for there to even be a union to defend. He argued that Deneen and Vance "stain the memory of the men who fought in that war" by reducing the causes they fought for to simply protecting their brothers in arms.

However, Brooks took a deeper route and posited that if America is truly a land of universal ideals that apply to everyone like freedom, democracy and human rights, then the vision of America that MAGA conservatives like Trump and Vance are promoting is fundamentally at odds with it. He further observed that the version of "morality" they're pushing is a "tribal" kind that pits Americans against each other in a "zero-sum" game. And he added that Trump referring to his political opponents as "scum" in his Memorial Day post to Truth Social showed the darkest side of his ideology.

"[T]hese little statements point to the moral rot at the core of Trumpism, which every day disgraces our country, which we are proud of and love," Brooks wrote. "Trumpism can be seen as a giant attempt to amputate the highest aspirations of the human spirit and to reduce us to our most primitive, atavistic tendencies."

"The use of the word 'scum' in that context is called dehumanization. It is a short step from dehumanization to all sorts of horrors," he continued. "Somebody should remind Trump that you don’t love your country if you hate half its members."

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Click here to read Brooks' column in full (subscription required).

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