Why I Like Donald Trump

I come to praise Donald Trump, not to disparage him. So be it if I burn a few bridges of the very few I seem to have left. Nor will this defence of former President Trump be directed at those who would vote for an embalmed mummy (or worse, Joe Biden, or worse again, Kamala Harris) before they voted for Donald Trump. Such voters see a world very different to the one I see and nothing I or anyone else says will make a whit of difference to how they vote.

No. I want to reply to all those conservatives who make clear that in fact they will hold their noses and will vote for Trump, but only because the choice is so woeful and the Democrat so bad. These are people who always like to preface any such admission by first saying that Mr. Trump “is simply not a suitable person for the office of President”; “he’s not got the right character”; “he’s a vastly flawed human being”; those sort of “take with one hand before you give with the other” genuflections. And I don’t just mean supposed conservative commentators here. I am even more explicitly responding to top conservative politicians of this ilk – which outside the U.S. is near on all of them. Your Boris Johnsons, John Howards, Tony Abbotts, a couple in New Zealand and Canada, the list goes on and on.

So let me just try to explain to all of them what so many Right-of-centre voters like me really like about Donald Trump. Why he’s not a least-bad choice in today’s world but rather a better one than almost all of them.

First off, he bends over backwards to try to do what he promised to do. He offers real, not phoney, opposition. Actual not artificial. Look at Trump’s first term and marvel at that fact (because he was being bogusly impeached and having the whole Russia collusion scam thrown at him the whole time). Trump promised to appoint interpretively conservative top judges and boy did he do that. (I defy anyone to name another conservative politician who would have stood by Bret Kavanagh in the face of the grossly implausible ‘Me Too’ charges going back decades to when he was in high school. Not a one of the ones who disparage Trump’s character right now would have been as brave.) Trump tried to repeal Obamacare but a Republican blocked that – John McCain, a man these Trump condemners would say had “the right stuff” and was, you know, “suitable”. Trump’s efforts as regards the border and building the border wall were infinitely better than Joe Biden’s deliberate dismantling of any and all constraints but let’s remember that it was the House of Representatives under Republican Speaker Paul Ryan who made funding the wall near impossible. Do any of the genuflectors disparage Mr. Ryan’s character?

This quality of doing what you can to keep all your promises is very, very difficult as a Right-of-centre politician where the legacy media leans 90% plus for the Lefty Dems (and yes, there are lots of data to support that). You have to have a hide as thick as an elephant’s. Trump tried to do what he promised. By contrast Boris got elected and then opted to embrace the woke world of Net Zero climate change idiocies. What does that say about his character? In Australia, Mr. Morrison took one position on Net Zero to the election and then embraced the opposite. Add to that Morrison’s total cluelessness when it comes to the presumption of innocence (ScoMo’s actions indicated he was against it) and to the value of free speech (“never created a single job” says the man who destroyed our economy opting to mimic the Chinese politburo’s response to the Covid virus). Remind me please. Conservatives believe actions matter far more than words and Trump’s actions during lockdowns were nowhere near as good as Governor Ron DeSantis’s. But they were orders of magnitude better than Morrison’s and even Boris’s (no vaccine mandates from Trump and Trump actually tried to stand up to the public health lockdown thugs in a way that embarrasses the supposedly liberal Boris in comparison).

I mentioned above that Trump fought hard to appoint interpretively conservative judges. Tony Abbott – and no one defended Mr. Abbott against the defenestrating Malcolm Turnbull more vigorously than I did, but if you’re going to disparage other politicians then you have to face facts – meanwhile appointed the wife of the retiring High Court judge to fill his place and she has turned out to be overtly on the activist side of the court. Mr. Abbott also threw in the towel on his explicit pledge to try to repeal the s.18C hate speech laws. He didn’t put repeal to the Senate and make them block it. He just threw in the towel (and in doing so lost a lot of support from his core voters). But it’s Mr. Trump who refuses to cave in to the establishment, wet, ‘moderate’ wing of the Republican party who has the character deficiencies?

Let me also remind readers that Mr. Trump is overtly attacking the entire ‘Diversity, Equity and Inclusion’ behemoth that deals in identity politics. Boris never managed to do more than hoist a white flag and Australia’s state Liberal leaders are weaker still. And I don’t hear Mr. Dutton willing to fight on any culture war issues. Whose actions show more character I ask? Can you imagine Mr. Trump praising our woeful e-Safety commissioner in the way that Mr. Dutton ridiculously did? (Again, I think Peter Dutton is the best conservative leader going in today’s Liberal Party but I would take a Trump any day of the week. And a Trump-like person would be further ahead in the polls too. Just look at  Canada’s Pierre Poilievre who fights these culture war battles and is way up in the polls in a more Left-wing country.)

So, yes, I do think Donald Trump is pretty much exactly what today’s political landscape calls for in a conservative political leader. Sure, he’s crass and boorish and likes ketchup. But he fights and doesn’t capitulate. He tries to keep his electoral promises, all of them. He is brave (where Boris was flat out cowardly). His crude combativeness, his brushing aside of nuance, his joy in the battle are precisely what are needed in today’s fight against a radical, open borders, weaponising-the-justice-system Left-wing establishment. On Covid Trump was a lot less thuggish than Boris or Morrison or most all of the Right-of-centre Cabinet Ministers in the U.K. and here. Here’s the test. Would you prefer a ‘decent’ Rishi Sunak who capitulated in full to the Tony Blair worldview or a ‘flawed’ Trump? No sane person should expect to agree with a candidate on everything. I don’t agree with Trump on everything. But I agree with loads of his positions. And most of all I like his character. Let me repeat – he fights and is brave. He stands up to the bureaucracy – and will do so a lot more should he win in 2024.

The holier-than-thou and (let’s keep being blunt) snobby conservative commentariat and ex-politicians’ fraternity might like to look in the mirror, and at their own records in office, and then let shame and humility temper their “oh, but Trump doesn’t really have the right character for office” bleatings that have more to do with being acceptable in polite society than with what is known in the philosophy of science as ‘the facts’.

James Allan is the Garrick Professor of Law at Queensland University. This article first appeared in Spectator Australia.

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varmint
1 year ago

He withdrew from the phony Paris Agreement which he knew is just Eco Socialism that takes power and freedom from your own country (US) and hands over to technocrats at the UN seeking to control the worlds wealth and resources. —-For that I give 10 out of 10, because the rest of the Political Class all over the western world are feeble UN lackeys selling out their own citizens to the pretend to save the planet agenda.
——He seriously wanted to limit mass immigration even building a fence as has happened in Hungary.
——There would have been no invasion of Ukraine, and Iran would be curtailed.
——So I also like Trump because he does what he says he will do. The Liberal Progressives say nothing and do nothing.

wokeman
wokeman
1 year ago
Reply to  varmint

And that. He calls net zero etc a scam, which is the truth. The liberal progressive say nothing then destroy everything.

transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  varmint

He withdrew the US from the WHO too

Kone Wone
Kone Wone
1 year ago

And hopefully will do so again.

Hardliner
1 year ago
Reply to  varmint

Au contraire, the Liberal Progressives never stop talking and telling us what to do, but don’t actually do much

misslawbore
misslawbore
1 year ago
Reply to  varmint

Say it: he stands like a Titan above the others

wokeman
wokeman
1 year ago

For some reason the orange one is the only of the guilty men I’ve forgiven for his part in COVID lunacy. I don’t fully understand why but I suppose I respect his courage in being one of the few standing up against the Marxist left in the west.

RTSC
RTSC
1 year ago
Reply to  wokeman

I think the difference is Trump almost certainly didn’t know what was planned and was duped. The rest of the Guilty Men/Women did know.

RTSC
RTSC
1 year ago

I can’t say I particularly like Trump, but I recognise exactly what James Allen says: Trump tries very hard to keep his promises; is brave (THAT picture is already iconic) and will do his level best to look out for the interests of ordinary Americans and dismantle the left-wing “Deep State” that is destroying the USA.

That’s why they fear him …. they know he will try to do what he says he will do.

Free Lemming
1 year ago

Trump failed the biggest test in human history – the phoney pandemic. And he still seems proud that he’d fail it again. He’s clearly the best of a very bad and corrupt bunch, but that’s it – less bad and less corrupt.

MichaelM
1 year ago
Reply to  Free Lemming

I disagree. The decision to lock down was held by individual states, not the President. He did not introduce vaccine mandates for government employees and employees of businesses in the supply chain to the public sector. He did not roll out vaccines.

What he did – through Operation Warp Speed – is facilitate the speedy development and production of vaccines. I would argue that was a good thing, since it created options (to vaccinate the vulnerable, say) which would not otherwise have been available.

RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  MichaelM

Resurrecting ModeRNA from the brink of financial collapse by enabling it to sell a highly deadly light-touch regulated gene vaccine against a perfectly harmless disease doesn’t count as good deed although it certainly created ‘options’ (for shareholders) which didn’t exist before.

Epi
Epi
1 year ago
Reply to  MichaelM

I never understand why you would want to “vaccinate” the “vulnerable”. I would have thought the last thing the “vulnerable” need is one of those (let’s be clear) experimental death jabs. Criminal enough giving them to the fit and well.

Marque1
1 year ago
Reply to  Free Lemming

You seem holier than thou and very unforgiving. Have you no blind spots or wrong beliefs (according to other people), have you never made a mistake and been unable to recognise it?

Free Lemming
1 year ago
Reply to  Marque1

Well fellah, there’s mistakes and then there’s mistakes. My very simple mind bizarrely distinguishes between a dodgy one night stand and the enabling of a force which will enslave humanity. But that’s just me – holy and all that.

Epi
Epi
1 year ago
Reply to  Free Lemming

That’s probably about as good as you get nowadays. Having said that how many past leaders even supposed “great” ones weren’t flawed or weak in some respect? Very very few.

Mrs Bunty
1 year ago

I like Trump. I liked him before his last stint at President, much to the chagrin of my son who lives in America and is a Republican, who chose not to vote for his first term. I can’t stand listening to him talk, same as I couldn’t stand listening to Boris, both of them as speakers grate on my ears. Considering everything they’ve thrown at him, weird crazy lady charges, fake Russian compromat, felony charges and racism complaints, he’s still standing even after an assassination attempt. An attempt that is being airbrushed away by the media in favour of another moron puppet. The media really are Pravda now.

I hope he wins. If not and Harris does it’s another 8 years downhill for America, joining us who are leading the way now with Kneel.

Son is voting Trump this time.

For a fist full of roubles

I like Trump particularly because he winds up everyone whose views I don’t agree with. Asking if someone likes Trump is a good way of smoking out closet leftists.

Epi
Epi
1 year ago

Well said

Jaguar
Jaguar
1 year ago

Trump was well known before 2016. He was a reality TV star, he organised boxing matches and beauty competitions and his property developments often attracted attention.
Nobody thought he was a fascist/racist/Russian agent/white supremacist until he declared that he wanted to be President, then the stream of nonsense invective started up.
The amazing thing to me is just how gullible most people are.

Bill Hickling
Bill Hickling
1 year ago

That he has stood up to 8 years of vilification and lawfare from the liberal media and the Democrat machine makes me like him even more.

MichaelM
1 year ago

He genuinely wants to MAGA and improve the lives of ordinary Americans. He believes in free speech and is anti-DEI and climate nonsense. He is anti-war and may well be the saviour of the western world. And he is funny.

RW
RW
1 year ago

In an ideal world, I wouldn’t ever hear any details about US presidental elections save their eventual outcome.

JXB
JXB
1 year ago

He is not deceived by nor obsessed with “climate change” and will kick Net Zero/Green Deal into touch – and drill, baby, drill.

Thus will be a huge spanner in the Climate Industry Leviathan.

That alone gets my vote – if I had one in the US.

Corky Ringspot
1 year ago

…. and he’s got a sense of humour, and he’s not a racist, and…
Acid test for me: whom would you rather have coming to dinner – K Harris, J Biden or D Trump? For me it’s a no-brainer.

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
1 year ago

As a Christian. Make no mistake, God sent President Trump 🇺🇲. Vote America as if your life depends on it, because it does

coviture2020
coviture2020
1 year ago

Donald would know what is motivating the unrest in Britain at the moment and would be prepared to say so.

Epi
Epi
1 year ago

Top man gone up another notch in my estimate liking ketchup!