Another heated examination of the current president, who “seems ripped right out of [a] comic book supervillain universe.”
MSNBC political analyst Reid (Fracture: Barack Obama, the Clintons, and the Racial Divide, 2015, etc.), the host of AM Joy, serves up an impassioned exposé of Donald Trump, from his early adult years as an ethically challenged businessman through his first two years as president. As part of the big picture, the author also skewers the corruption of the Republican Party. In fiery prose, Reid delivers a well-researched narrative about how Trump methodically overcame establishment Republican opponents to dominate a political party he had shunned for most of his life. The author terms the new partisan reality the “Trump Republican Party.” She explains how Trump managed to divide the country into factions that constantly battle over both politics and culture. She scrutinizes Trump’s dealings with nations both friendly and hostile, delineating the president’s ugly attraction to “strongmen” in other nations. Russia’s Vladimir Putin is the most prominent example, but others include the dictators of the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, North Korea, Hungary, and Poland. The chapter in the book containing the least amount of rehashed material is titled “What America Can Learn From South Africa.” Reid’s father is Congolese but spent much of his life working in South Africa, and she explains how Nelson Mandela instituted racial reconciliation as a national imperative, despite the persecution he faced for decades. The “frankness about race, from black and white South Africans, felt refreshing and surprisingly healthy,” she writes. Reid contrasts the selflessness she saw in South Africa with Trump’s self-centered approach of dividing and conquering, especially along racial and cultural faults. Another chapter that moves beyond relating oft-repeated allegations about Trump highlights the author’s frustration at the news media for more or less normalizing his unique cruelty as president.
A searing indictment and a good choice for readers who have never delved into Trump’s pre-presidential background.