Throughout his time atop the Republican Occasion, Donald Trump’s lifetime habits of fraud and grifting have fused seamlessly with conservative politics. In 2024 alone, Trump debuted $399 gold sneakers emblazoned with the American flag, offered a $60 “God Bless the USA” Bible endorsed by singer Lee Greenwood, and satisfied tens of millions to buy inventory in Reality Social’s unprofitable mother or father firm.
Trump is usually handled as a political hijacker who rerouted the Republican Occasion to his personal self-interested ends. Absolutely that’s a part of the reality. However on the similar time, there’s a good case that, relating to grifting, his hijacking try might solely succeed as a result of conservative motion’s ingrained scammy tendencies.
From paranoid anti-Communist lecture collection within the Fifties to crowdfunded birther investigations to Alex Jones peddling faux coronavirus cures, there’s a lengthy and storied historical past of elites peddling worry and paranoia to make a buck. The issue has gotten so unhealthy that, up to now a number of years, many outstanding conservatives have publicly bemoaned the omnipresence of grifts within the conservative ranks.
However the place did this tradition come from, and the way necessary was it to Trump’s rise?
These questions are on the coronary heart of The Longest Con, a forthcoming e-book on the historical past of right-wing scams and frauds. The e-book’s creator, Joe Conason, is a veteran New York journalist; he personally knew a few of the key figures within the scammy proper’s historical past, like mobbed-up lawyer and Trump mentor Roy Cohn.
Conason locates the origins of the grift custom with Joe McCarthy, whose anti-Communist marketing campaign proved that paranoid lies might be a ticket to recognition on the grassroots proper. Cohn, who labored for McCarthy, found out a approach to transmute that recognition into revenue: exploiting fears of Communism to, amongst different issues, finance a lavish journey to Europe.
“The template for right-wing grift … adopted in McCarthy’s wake,” Conason writes. “By creating such an environment of utter dread — after which promising that they alone might stop America’s doom — [hucksters] induced 1000’s of suckers at hand over giant wads of money.”
Because the conservative motion grew, the grifts grew with it. Conason pinpoints Barry Goldwater’s 1964 presidential run as a key turning level. The marketing campaign produced a large mailing listing that scammers might solicit for donations to alleged political causes that principally lined their very own pockets. When these “unsolicited mail” scams proved immensely worthwhile, they expanded, normalizing an ethos of grifting on the precise that, in the end, would attain its apogee in Donald Trump.
I spoke to Conason about this fascinating, hidden-in-plain-sight historical past: about the way it began, why it succeeded, the way it paved the best way for Trump’s rise, and whether or not there’s any equal grifting tradition on the American left. What follows is a transcript of that dialog, edited for size and readability.
Zack Beauchamp
So Roy Cohn. He begins his profession as this corrupt New York lawyer, bridging the worlds of Democratic politics, excessive society, and mafiosos. When does he make the soar to the precise, and the way necessary is he within the rise of conservative grift tradition?
Joe Conason
I believe fairly necessary. The individuals who tolerated him for the longest time — William Safire, very respectable, Invoice Buckley, very respectable. These individuals, they knew what Roy was. They knew he was a criminal and a con man and a liar and a cheater, and but, that was okay. To me, that was an indication of one thing very flawed in conservative tradition, trying again, that that man could be not solely tolerated however celebrated.
As I say within the e-book, they’d have massive events to have a good time him. Ronald Reagan had Roy to the White Home, and when Roy was sick, they bent the principles to get him therapy that no person knew about, regardless that he was pretending to not have AIDS. Roger Stone, who turned very highly effective within the conservative motion, was a protégé of Roy’s.
He had some form of attraction or attraction or one thing for these conservatives, who in any other case I believe would’ve advised you that they themselves would by no means ponder doing the sorts of issues that Roy did, which is mainly stiffing the IRS for 20 years or 30 years or nonetheless lengthy it was, and never paying his collectors, which is a factor that Trump appears to have picked up from him.
He was a rogue, and I believe [they thought] “Oh, he was a roguish fellow. Wasn’t he enjoyable?” However sooner or later, you catch a bit of the illness your self. And I believe the willingness to miss Roy’s deep, deep corruption was — let’s simply say it was a foul signal. I can’t inform you that that brought about something, but it surely was not an excellent signal concerning the ethical character of that motion in its earliest days.
Zack Beauchamp
Let’s discuss concerning the enlargement of this, as a result of clearly, grifting within the conservative motion isn’t only a Roy Cohn story — although he was a pioneer in a few of the earliest variations of those methods of grifting, about promoting worry of communism.
Joe Conason
Within the aftermath of McCarthy, the impulse and the marketability of anti-communism as an ideology didn’t go away. To show it right into a enterprise, you’d promote lectures. There have been a collection of them that I profiled within the e-book that had other ways of selling a hysterical model of anti-communism to middle-class and upper-middle-class individuals who have been terrified. They might pay rather a lot to go to a lecture, they’d purchase lecture tapes, they’d purchase books. It might price them lots of of {dollars}, which in 2024 {dollars} is 1000’s of {dollars}.
This obtained so unhealthy that J. Edgar Hoover — who was thought-about the best authority on communism on the precise, had an entire equipment to root out communism within the nation — was appalled by these individuals. I discovered communications between Hoover and his deputies about a few of these people they considered grifters and con males and crooks, and so they investigated them. That’s how unhealthy it was: J. Edgar Hoover thought “these guys are crooks and so they’re giving anti-communism a foul identify.”
Zack Beauchamp
Through the Chilly Struggle interval, how central was the grifting and con man stuff to the conservative motion? The usual historical past is that, certain, perhaps there have been some cranks on the facet, however Ronald Reagan and William F. Buckley outlined a brand new and principled mind-set about American politics.
Your e-book presents an alternate historical past, positioning the profiteering and swindling as one thing that grew with the post-war conservative motion. Simply how deeply intertwined is the grift with the extra dedicated facet of the motion?
Joe Conason
What I might say is that the grifting facet — the facet that doesn’t actually imagine in something very a lot besides its personal enrichment — has grown. It wasn’t essentially the dominant portion at first in any respect. However there’s some extent within the e-book the place Richard Viguerie discovers unsolicited mail and the way he can use the Goldwater motion [in 1964] to construct an enormous unsolicited mail trade. I’d say that was a turning level.
Richard Viguerie was a man who had been introduced into the unsolicited mail enterprise with the Buckley crowd — Younger Individuals for Freedom, which was their central group, apart from the Nationwide Assessment, for elevating cash. He realized that you can simply ask individuals for cash and they’d give it to you.
Zack Beauchamp
You don’t even have to be promoting them something bodily, proper? That’s the innovation right here, you simply ship them a mailer promising to struggle for what they believed in.
Joe Conason
Sure. However the issue was that to ensure that that to be actually efficient on a nationwide degree, you wanted lists of names. And lists of names of conservatives simply didn’t exist till the Goldwater marketing campaign in 1964. Viguerie realized that the donors to the Goldwater marketing campaign comprised a nationwide listing of conservatives who would donate cash. He mentioned [it] was like a key to Fort Knox. It turned out he was proper: These individuals would give cash. And it constructed from there.
People who find themselves supplying you with cash don’t actually know what you’re doing with the cash. You’re telling them you’re doing this and that, and perhaps you might be and perhaps you’re not. In lots of circumstances not, and so they don’t have any means of realizing.
What they know is that they’ve grievances and issues that you simply’re addressing, otherwise you’re telling them you’re addressing. They’re keen to provide cash to make themselves, I assume, really feel higher about that.
Now, it took some time for it to take over. However as soon as that begins, it was unimaginable to cease. It takes over a bigger and bigger portion of the conservative motion, to the purpose the place we now have Trump.
One of many causes I wrote the e-book is you’ll be able to see how, over time, this impulse to swindle and grift turned a much bigger and larger a part of conservatism. And the trustworthy conservatism — the ideological and philosophical [principles], what they thought-about ethical advantage — has been stripped away.
Zack Beauchamp
So that you simply jumped from Viguerie within the ’60s all the best way ahead to Trump in 2016. There’s a wealth of time throughout which this spreading occurs. What are a few of the key occasions in between, those that fueled the rise of right-wing grift tradition?
Joe Conason
It takes completely different kinds over time. One is the non secular proper: Jerry Falwell, the Ethical Majority, Pat Robertson, the Christian Coalition. Now the Prosperity Gospel sorts who’re round Trump, who’re simply straight-up grifters. That turns into a giant component in it.
Then you might have the Reagan administration, which I describe as probably the most corrupt in historical past — up till Trump a minimum of — by way of the variety of prosecutions and scandals. There have been fairly a number of individuals who discovered methods to revenue from authorities packages that they have been supposedly getting into there to finish or cut back.
One of the crucial attention-grabbing is Paul Manafort, who turns up a lot later as Trump’s marketing campaign supervisor. James Watt was one other. A Western conservative who supposedly was towards massive authorities, he was simply discovering methods to receives a commission off and virtually went to jail for it.
Then we come to the interval simply earlier than Trump arises: the Tea Occasion and the birther motion. That too was a grift: There have been actually grifters getting individuals to provide them cash to show that Obama shouldn’t be president or was not certified to be president, however the lead determine in that was Trump. And so, logically, Trump turns into a power throughout the Republican Occasion, and in the meantime, the Republican Occasion is form of shedding its means usually and turns into very weak to somebody like him.
Zack Beauchamp
What I believe is novel right here in your e-book is seeing this historical past as laying a novel form of pathway for Trump. You had these generations of people that constructed an increasing empire of revenue grafted onto conservative ideology, after which Donald Trump comes alongside and he’s like, “Wait, I can simply make the motion absolutely into that — an extension of my efforts at brand-building.” That’s a core a part of what permits him to reach Republican politics: that brand-building and profiteering have already been constructed into it over the course of a long time.
Joe Conason
I might level out that the creator of Trump, in quite a lot of methods, is Roger Stone, who’s been within the grifting enterprise of conservatism for a extremely very long time. Stone noticed that Trump was a extremely excellent risk for the form of politics that Roger represented, which was a hole politics of demagoguery with greater than a contact of racial paranoia and hate, and that might be completely versatile by way of positions and points and viewpoints and rhetoric.
Roger obtained to know Trump through the first Reagan marketing campaign by Roy Cohn. And he found out this was a man who had actual potential. They’d a mannequin, a means of conducting themselves politically that was each efficient on a sure phase of the general public and extremely worthwhile. They’d thought of it for a few years earlier than Trump lastly agreed to run for president.
Trump was an ideal candidate [because] he had proven he would get entangled in any form of grift. He’d gotten concerned in multilevel advertising. Trump College was a sort of rip-off: the faux actual property funding seminar, which might get individuals to pay massive cash and promise them that they’d make quite a lot of revenue on actual property themselves. Trump had an ideal model to get into, and so he did.
Roger Stone and others round him realized, “Hey, that is our man. We are able to capitalize all of this that’s been constructed up to now and discard something that’s inconvenient about conservatism as a result of who cares?”
Zack Beauchamp
So now, we get the main Republican presidential candidate hawking multi-hundred-dollar sneakers and an America-themed Bible as a method of earning profits — a full integration of political celebration with rip-off ventures. There’s nothing like this degree of mainstream hucksterism on the Democratic facet, so far as I can inform.
Joe Conason
In writing the e-book, I went out and regarded for examples of this on the blue facet. I believe individuals get swindled by every kind of issues on a regular basis, no matter their politics are.
Zack Beauchamp
I believe you might have some fairly strong examples of individuals on the left in your introduction who’ve grifted liberals. We are able to additionally discuss concerning the Democratic machines in cities which might be much less ideological and extra targeted on sustaining energy.
Joe Conason
Look, now we have a Democratic senator proper now who’s [been indicted for] hiding gold bars.
Zack Beauchamp
Proper.
Joe Conason
I might by no means faux that corruption or lying or greed is confined to the precise, and I hope I didn’t give that impression within the e-book. However there are specific themes on the precise that appear to lend themselves to those sorts of crooked schemes.
Roger Stone mentioned way back that one among his guidelines of politics is that hate triumphs over love in politics, that hate is probably the most saleable factor in politics. All of his campaigns have been primarily based on that fairly curdled perception, and quite a lot of the merchandising comes all the way down to that as nicely.
It’s what they now name “personal the libs,” but it surely’s been the identical emotion for many years and a long time now.