Of course he did. After all, it's a day of the week ending in "ay."
As horrifying as this is, it isn't news. Nor does it tell us a single thing that everyone didn't already know about Trump, the audience to whom he addressed his bile, and the 40+ percent of the electorate who will vote for him again no matter what he does. (Are you surprised in the least that the reaction on FoxNews was gleeful?)
So it's not an especially important or revealing incident, in and of itself.
What is important--although also, sad to say, hardly groundbreaking--is that not a single one of the 250 Republican members of Congress, nor anyone who has served in Trump's Administration, will publicly acknowledge that this behavior demonstrates Trump's patent unfitness to hold the highest office in the land (or any office, for that matter). Indeed, very few of the 250 (any?) will so much as criticize the tweets, or call them what they are.
Why should this day be any different? They were silent when his response to a plausible allegation of rape was "She's not my type." They were silent when he cozied up to and coddled autocrats such as Orban, Putin, Erdogan, Kim Jong Un and bin Salman. They were silent when he refused to allow anyone in his administration to be privy to his discussions with the Russian President. They were silent when he--repeatedly--spewed outrageous calumnies against countless dedicated, talented and patriotic officials in the Intelligence Community, DOJ and the FBI. They were (mostly) silent when he mocked John McCain for having been captured in Vietnam; when he referred to "blood coming out of her wherever" when speaking of Megyn Kelly; when he sneered at Khizr and Ghazala Khan; when he claimed that thousands ofNew Jersey Muslims cheered the 9/11 attacks and then openly mocked Serge Kovaleski's disability when the reporter called out his lies. They were silent when the Mueller Report described a series of self-interested violations of his constitutional duties and well-established norms in an effort to undermine the most important counterintelligence investigation of a generation. They were silent when he gave an Independence Day speech in which he described the Continental Army as "seiz[ing] victory from Cornwallis of Yorktown," "ramm[ing] the ramparts," taking over the airports, and then watching the star-spangled banner "wave[] defiant” at dawn.
The list, of course, goes on . . . and on, and on, and on. "Grab 'em by the pussy." "There are very fine people on both sides." "Shithole countries." Ad nauseam. When one's project is (apparently) to lower the bar each and every day, there's no shortage of evidence of this vile man's unfitness for office and degradation of public discourse. Every reader of this blog could easily identify another dozen or more examples.
There was a day (or so I'd like to think) in which there would have been a consensus outcry, among virtually all public officials and figures, and virtually all commentators, writers and even, yes, academics, no matter their partisan affiliations, that each and every one of these things was beyond the pale--that any single one of them obviously rendered Trump unfit for office. Today, however, there's virtual silence from Republicans in power, and the intellectual and political classes that support them, as the deviancy is defined downward repeatedly. (Indeed, even former President Bush and serious individuals who've worked for Trump and seen the deviancy up close--think Mattis/McMaster, et al.--hold their tongues.) It's not Trump's behavior itself that's "normalized" the unthinkable--it's the utter absence of any concerted, bipartisan outrage and alarm in response.
To be sure, there are a handful of brave exceptions, most of whom are employed by or write under the aegis of the Washington Post, Lawfare or "Checks & Balances," such as Max Boot, George Conway, Jennifer Rubin, Peter Keisler, Jack Goldsmith, Anne Applebaum, Don Ayer (if you haven't already read it, check out this recent, extraordinary piece by Ayer, a man of great integrity who fears for what his nation and party have become), Charles Fried, Michael Gerson, and a few others. They deserve our deep respect. [UPDATE: Here's the "Checks & Balances" statement "on President Trump’s Racist Tweets." Just about pitch-perfect, as ever (although I would have liked them to say out loud what's implicit--namely, that the conduct demonstrates unfitness for office).]
This list, however, unfortunately does not go on and on. It consists of only a handful of "Never-Trumpers" who could (and have) fit comfortably into David Frum's foyer. And however large this group might be, they have no political constituency within the Republican Party. The one elected GOP member of Congress who's had the temerity to call Trump's tweets this morning for what they were--"racist and disgusting"--is, not surprisingly, no longer welcome in the Party. Sadly, it's undeniably true that "[a]mong conservatives, NeverTrumpism is already a fringe and irrelevant movement."
To reiterate: By now none of this is newsworthy. It's our new normal.
So why do I bother writing about it? Mostly to lament something else we've all known for quite a while, even if we're understandably reticent to acknowledge it and say it aloud because it's so deeply disconcerting--namely, that our revered institutions are not, and will not be, bulwarks against what was once unthinkable. And therefore the answer to "Can It Happen Here?" is now also manifest, unequivocal . . . and terrifying: Of course it could--probably with barely a whimper, and with the acquiescence (or worse) of the entirety of one of our major political parties and a significant minority of Americans. If virtually no one in the GOP so much as objects to Trump's litany of outrages, is there any reason to think a majority of that Party would suddenly put principle and the Nation's well-being ahead of partisan advantage if the authoritarian winds sweeping over Europe and other places in the world arrive at our shores?