Phil Magness reminds us that among the most rabid of the covidians were many of today’s leading MAGA-ites. Three slices:
Resistance to the COVID-era lockdowns occupies a central place in the political identity of the New Right—the eclectic group of national conservatives, postliberals, populists, and neoreactionaries at the ideological core of the MAGA coalition. Ironically, it was President Donald Trump who enabled lockdowns by proclaiming a national emergency in March 2020 and appointed Anthony Fauci to lead his administration’s pandemic response efforts. And yet the New Right has opted to look past these contradictions.
It has become routine for New Right political figures to position themselves as leaders of a bold resistance against the COVID restrictions—vice president and self-described postliberal J.D. Vance launched his Senate campaign in 2021 with an attack on “Fauci’s cabal”—even as they were largely absent as these events unfolded in 2020.
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[Auron] MacIntyre is a devout [Curtis] Yarvin enthusiast, but with a peculiar twist. At the time of MacIntyre’s claimed COVID awakening in April 2020, Yarvin was busy preaching the necessity of Wuhan-style lockdowns, electronic exposure tracking, and other authoritarian measures to halt the coronavirus in America.
Yarvin’s counter-pandemic “plan” ventured into extremes that even the most fanatical lockdowners avoided stating openly. “Americans all have [cell] phones,” he wrote. “Why haven’t we started full population control—with involuntary tracking, testing, and isolation—yesterday?”
He mocked lockdowns in his home state of California for being insufficiently aggressive to accomplish the task of virus control, ridiculed Americans as too “puerile, spoiled and arrogant” to meet the challenge of COVID, and faulted our free economy and democratic institutions for creating obstacles to imposing a China-esque virus control plan. Yarvin’s proposed interventions read like a would-be dictator’s fever dream.
He called for the creation of a “Coronavirus Authority” with “unconditional and unlimited authority over all public and private actors,” operating beyond the reach of Congress and unaccountable to any court review or constitutional oversight. To blunt the economic disruption of such draconian measures, Yarvin proposed that the Federal Reserve convert all private stock and bond holdings into public assets in exchange for a one-time payment. In this new financial reordering, “The Fed owns all public companies” for the duration of the pandemic, with any debt being incurred by the Fed and then canceled. This temporary dictatorship (or as Yarvin put it, “literally the state capitalism of the Soviet Union”) would run for the course of the pandemic before resetting society after the lockdowns worked—an outcome in which Yarvin had supreme confidence.
As for anyone who complained, Yarvin’s plan called for complete social ostracism and suppression. “In a sane world, anyone with a public record of minimizing the coronavirus would be cancelled—unfit for any further employment, let alone in this crisis.” He wanted people to fear even “being linked to a coronavirus minimizer.”
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Today, New Right figures rail against Fauci and the United States’ pandemic response policies that they embraced or acquiesced to in 2020. But they remain suspiciously silent about the lockdown records of other governments they support. The New Right, and postliberals in particular, often extol the government of Viktor Orbán in Hungary as a model for conservative governance. Orbán imposed harsh lockdowns in 2020, far exceeding the restrictions in the United States. Another New Right hero, President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, imposed one of the strictest lockdown regimes in Central America and repeatedly defied court orders that challenged his rule by emergency decree. Bukele’s subsequent takeover of his country’s judiciary and accompanying prison system are, in part, direct byproducts of his COVID-era restrictions.
As with much of America, genuine fear over an unknown pandemic likely motivated the New Right toward lockdowns and other forms of alarm at the outbreak of the pandemic. Before he turned against lockdowns in the late spring of 2020, [Tucker] Carlson personally lobbied Trump to take more aggressive action in his COVID response. Other, more opportunistic motives also played a role though, as New Right figures tried to appropriate the pandemic response to pet issues such as countering free trade and immigration.
[DBx: On social media, someone – mistakenly supposing himself to score points against this piece by Phil Magness – accused Magness of being a member of the “anti-tariff wing of MAGA.” This accusation is akin to accusing someone of being in the anti-abortion wing of Planned Parenthood or in the anti-government-schooling wing of the National Education Association. Such a wing is not a thing. Furthermore, anyone remotely familiar with Magness’s work would know that he is emphatically not MAGA. He’s quite the opposite.]
Gage Klipper reviews a new movie about covid.
Eric Boehm is correct: “Trump promised that protectionism and immigration enforcement would be good for the economy. The latest jobs report tells a different story.”
Also correct is Noah Rothman: “You can’t eat record ‘tariff revenues’.” A slice:
Lutnick was right; July’s disappointing numbers grew from the initial 73,000 new jobs to today’s 79,000. But at the same time, the BLS adjusted June’s numbers downward, finding that the U.S. lost 13,000 jobs that month — the first month of employment contraction in the United States since the height of the pandemic. June’s ugly figures mirror May’s ugly figures, when just 19,000 new jobs were created. If the president and his advisers want to take the BLS’s good June, they’ll have to acknowledge the legitimacy of its bad August, July, and May.
All told, the BLS’s reports over the past four months indicate that the American job market hit a wall in April — an impact that coincided with the inauguration of the great trade war. It’s a sharp decline from the six months that preceded May, each of which showed the U.S. creating more than 100,000 jobs per month.
Soon enough, the sluggish job market combined with the growing sense that high and rising prices are a feature of the Trump economy will present this administration with growing political challenges. If the White House’s only answer to those challenges is to bedazzle you with the amount of money that, but for the tariff regime, would still be in your bank account, they’ll discover that the public’s tolerance for the administration’s many other flights of fancy has limits.
The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board reflects on yesterday’s dismal jobs report. Two slices:
President Trump fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner last month because he didn’t like the monthly jobs numbers. He claimed the numbers were “rigged.” But Friday’s monthly report for August confirms that job creation has stalled amid his tariff barrage.
Employers added a mere 22,000 jobs last month while the numbers were revised down for the previous two by a combined 21,000. This means only 107,000 new jobs were created in the last four months—an average of 27,000. Monthly job gains averaged 167,000 last year.
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What Mr. Trump needs is a broad revival in business confidence of the kind that accompanied his November victory and appeared before his tax on imports and willy-nilly interventions in private business decisions. Repeat after us: Tariffs are taxes, and taxes hurt economic growth.
Mr. Trump this week asked the Supreme Court to hear the legal challenge to his tariffs on a fast track. The best news for the economy would be if the Court takes up his challenge and finds them unconstitutional.
Jennifer Huddleston explains “what the Google antitrust remedies ruling means for antitrust, consumers, and innovation.”