From Harold Meyerson, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Devout Speaker Johnson and the Worship of Trump
Date May 15, 2025 7:45 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The Latest from the Prospect ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

??

View this email in your browser [link removed]

**MAY 15, 2025**

On the Prospect website

Republicans Outdo Themselves in Food Stamp Cuts
[link removed]
House Republicans plan to cut a staggering $300 billion from SNAP, far more than they'd originally planned. BY EMMA JANSSEN

Grim Times for Washingtonians [link removed]
The fiscal distress Republicans are inflicting on residents of the nation's capital is unprecedented, and it will hit human services the hardest. BY GABRIELLE GURLEY

Trump Appointees Are Hijacking the Patent System [link removed]
Cronyism is threatening American innovation. BY ALEX MOSS & TIMI IWAYEMI

How Mark Zuckerberg Endangered U.S. Security in Pursuit of Profit
[link removed]
Facebook has exposed Americans and American security to Chinese surveillance. BY CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS

Meyerson on TAP

****

****

****

****

****

****

****

**** Devout Speaker Johnson and the Worship of Trump

Trump's acceptance of a really cool $400 million 747 bribe raises no ethical issues for Old-Time Religion Johnson.

Donald Trump's deals with his fellow sultans this week, particularly the one for a 747 that Qatar has rigged out with the kind of gold-shmeared decor he so loves, have provided some ethical challenges for Trump's fellow Republicans-none more so than House Speaker Mike Johnson.

Speaker Johnson, after all, is a stickler for and promoter of traditional Christian ethics. Last year, he told a gaggle of reporters
[link removed] that he supported a newly enacted Louisiana law-drafted, he pointed out, by some of his onetime colleagues in that state's legislature-requiring schools to post the Ten Commandments in classrooms. "I don't think it's offensive in any way," he said. "I think it's a positive thing."

Some Republican members of Congress, less ostentatiously guided by the Lord's ethical codes than their Speaker, have condemned Trump's acceptance of Qatar's $400 million gift. Johnson, however, has managed to craft an ethical loophole through which Trump, in his assessment, can strut. "Other nations give us gifts all the time," he told reporters yesterday [link removed]. Asked whether Trump and his family's business dealings created ethical issues of the kind that
Republicans loudly and constantly criticized in Hunter Biden's various endeavors, Johnson explained the difference between those two cases.

Unlike Hunter's, Trump's dealings are "all out in the open," he said. "I can just tell you, President Trump has nothing to hide, he's very upfront about it. Congress has oversight responsibility, but so far as I know the ethics are all being followed."

[link removed]

In other words, Trump's shamelessness renders him immune from ethical norms and responsibilities, not to mention anti-bribery statutes. Nice work if you can get it.

Johnson is hardly the first public servant to classify ethical transgressions into two categories: OK and not OK. Whether he knows it or not, he is all but reincarnating the great Tammany ward boss George Washington Plunkitt, who once explained to an industrious New York reporter in 1905 the
difference between "honest graft" and "dishonest graft." The former, he said, was exemplified by his buying up land adjacent to a not-yet-announced major public project he'd gotten wind of. The latter was outright embezzling funds from the public till, which he'd never done. (Of course, by buying cheap and selling dear that land he'd bought up, Plunkitt had no need for anything so crude as embezzlement.)

But Ten Commandments Johnson is no mere apostle of situational ethics. By his own standards, he's also one cardinal sinner. In the first of those Ten Commandments, the Lord plainly says, "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." Somehow, Johnson has prostrated himself so completely before Donald Trump that the Lord has been left cooling His heels in some anteroom. Some might call that heresy; I'll settle for bad faith.

~ HAROLD MEYERSON

Follow Harold Meyerson on Twitter
[link removed]

[link removed]

To receive this newsletter directly in your inbox, click here to subscribe.?? [link removed]

Click to Share this Newsletter

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

??

[link removed]


??

[link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2025 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.

To opt out of American Prospect membership messaging, click here [link removed].

To manage your newsletter preferences, click here [link removed].

To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, click here [link removed].
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis