Republicans put the sick in sycophancy as they compete to fawn over Trump
From
adding the president’s face to Mount Rushmore to pushing for him to
serve a third term, party members are getting inventive in their
brown-nosing
If proof were needed that Donald Trump’s cult of personality
has never been stronger, it comes in the inventive ways Republican
members of Congress have spent his first month in office trying to
lionise him. Welcome to the sycophancy stakes.
On 23 January the congressman Addison McDowell of North Carolina introduced legislation to rename Washington Dulles international airport as Donald J Trump international airport.
“We
have entered the golden age of America largely thanks to President
Trump’s leadership,” McDowell said. Alluding to Ronald Reagan Washington
National airport, he added: “It is only right that the two airports
servicing our nation’s capital are duly honored and respected by two of
the best presidents to have the honor of serving our great nation.”
Not to be outdone, on the same day the Tennessee congressman Andy Ogles proposed a House of Representatives joint resolution
to amend the constitution so that a president can serve up to three
terms – provided that they did not serve two consecutive terms before
running for a third.
This would continue to bar
Bill Clinton, George W Bush and Barack Obama from running again but
enable Trump, elected in 2016 and 2024, to seek a third term in 2028.
Ogles
explained: “He has proven himself to be the only figure in modern
history capable of reversing our nation’s decay and restoring America to
greatness, and he must be given the time necessary to accomplish that
goal.”
On 28 January Anna Paulina Luna, a congresswoman from Florida, put forward legislation
to arrange the carving of Trump’s face on the Mount Rushmore national
memorial in South Dakota. Such a move would put him alongside the former
presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and
Theodore Roosevelt.
Luna said: “President
Trump’s bold leadership and steadfast dedication to America’s greatness
have cemented his place in history. Mount Rushmore, a timeless symbol of
our nation’s freedom and strength, deserves to reflect his towering
legacy – a legacy further solidified by the powerful start to his second
term.”
On 14 February the New York congresswoman Claudia Tenney introduced legislation
to officially designate 14 June as a federal holiday to commemorate
Trump’s birthday, along with the date in 1777 when the US approved the
design for its first national flag. The holiday would be known as
“Trump’s Birthday and Flag Day”.
Tenney
explained: “Just as George Washington’s birthday is codified as a
federal holiday, this bill will add Trump’s birthday to this list,
recognizing him as the founder of America’s Golden Age. Additionally, as
our nation prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary, we should
create a new federal holiday honoring the American flag and all that it
represents.”
It is far from certain that any of the bills will pass. During the last Congress,
a proposal to rename Dulles, which is currently named after John Foster
Dulles, an influential secretary of state during the cold war, was
referred to the House committee on transportation and infrastructure but
failed to gain traction. Many conservatives would be reluctant to
tamper with an American icon such as Mount Rushmore, which took 14 years
to carve and was completed in 1941.
Ogles’s
stunt faces the biggest obstacle of all. A constitutional amendment must
receive a two-thirds majority vote in both the House and Senate. If
that is achieved, three quarters of the states – 38 – must ratify the
amendment for it to become part of the constitution.
Still, the unsubtle exercises in ring-kissing and genuflection demonstrate that, buoyed by election success, Trump’s control over the Republican party
is now all but absolute. From Elon Musk’s so-called “department of
government efficiency” to the upending of US policy on Ukraine, few
Republicans are willing to speak out against the president-cum-monarch.
“We’ve gone from ‘Make America Great Again’ to make ‘America Great Britain Again’,” said Kurt Bardella,
a Democratic strategist and former Republican congressional aide. “You
might as well have an image of Donald Trump staring at a portrait of
King George and then turning around and putting a crown on his head, a
robe around his suit and a sceptre in his hand.”