As longtime readers are aware, the chorus of hundreds of Liberal voices which, for decades, provided ample evidence and brutally accurate warnings that the Eisenhower cheese was sliding off the Republican party's cracker and into the fascist abyss was, by, turns, scornfully, mockingly, angrily and then airily dismissed for years by Mr. Tom Nichols of The Atlantic.
Ol' Tom held those critiques to be ludicrous on their face. Or, at best, wild over-reactions by alarmist, Liberal cranks.
Then some time passed and, ok, something has clearly come undone inside the party of Reagan, but it is asinine to suggest that the rise of Trump has its roots deep in the Republican party. Gotta be something mechanical and fixable like a spun bearing or a cracked dilithium crystal, not structural. And whatever is going on, calling it "fascist" is waaaay out of line. At best, Trump was a black swan event. A fluke.
[brief driftglass aside: No Tom. It wasn't something mechanical and fixable. It wasn't a spun ideological bearing. It was your party's Pretty Hate Machine with a fatal leaking coolant...
...which I was writing about in detail 20 fucking years ago.: end brief driftglass aside. We now return to the cartography of ol' Tom's long, winding, through-gritted-teeth journey to where the Left has been all along.]
Or, ok, so, Trump's not going away. The fever is not breaking. But -- and I want to make this 100% clear -- as a child of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (God save it!), there is no way I personally could have known what was happening with the Republican party in faraway lands like Georgia and Mississippi. Despite the fact that knowing what's happening with the Republican party is my job.
And anyway, ol' Tom's got nothing to feel guilty about because the Left's hands are plenty dirty here! (From a since deleted Tom Nichols Tweet barking at brother Charlie Pierce who had the temerity to point out that Tom was full of shit.)
You will get no such contrition, because I think your party had plenty of matches and lighter fluid and is not free of responsibility here.— Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) July 14, 2019
And now, at last, in February of 2026 -- decades too late -- we arrive here.
Call Them What They Are
The Republican Party has become a haven for Nazi sympathizers.
By Tom Nichols
And this is the front-page teaser or "refer" for that story:
The Republican Party Has a Nazi Problem
How did the GOP become a haven for slogans and ideas straight out of the Third Reich?
Great question! Which we will definitely get to in a minute.
But at least as important as what ol' Tom says in this article is where the article was published. It's in The Atlantic.
And knowing that, you may ask yourself this question: how exactly does ol' Tom -- who has been wrong, tardy and dismissive all along -- rate a column in The Atlantic, while the folks who have been right all along -- folks who ol' Tom routinely derided, ridiculed and blocked from his perch at The Atlantic -- are still legacy media pariahs?
Again, great question. And I would suggest that it's the same reason so many other recently-former Republicans and Neocons have found a home at The Atlantic. Because in that pundit world, the fact that you have been wrong all along matters so very much less than the fact that you were wrong in all the right ways. Ways that flattered the average legacy media reader or viewer. A writer of things that are declarative, but cautious. Timid. And always, always riding that Both Sides Do It lane right down the middle, so that however harsh your Trump critique of the day may be, you make sure to take snide shots at the Left every step of the way.
Which is why this guy --
You will get no such contrition, because I think your party had plenty of matches and lighter fluid and is not free of responsibility here.— Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) July 14, 2019
-- was such a perfect fit for The Atlantic.
Four-fifths of this thing reads like an utterly anodyne, Wikipedia-style history of the modern Republican Party. Just another 9th grade book report recitation of the familiar facts and milestones of the modern Republican party with which, I'm sure, most of you are not only drearily familiar, but have been shouting from the rooftops since forever. Of course, St. Reagan’s image is carefully guarded and burnished, but from Nixon to Gingrich to Trump, there’s nothing here we haven’t known, discussed, dissected, blogged about, podcasted about, and thoroughly masticated for decades.
And the striking thing is, it doesn’t sound like Tom Nichols at all. None of the snark and bile he routinely unlimbers in the cause of belittling and tone policing any Liberal who disagrees with him. Instead it reads like a second cousin to Jay Rosen's "View from Nowhere".
The only time it even begins to sound like Nichols is when he dips into a wide-eyed, golly-how-did-this-happen voice -- as if he’s a child just discovered that Santa Claus isn’t real. What? When did this happen? How did this happen?
Then he ambles back over to Wikipedia, looks up the history of the Republican Party during his entire adult life, and says, "Oh, so that’s what happened."
However, to give Nichols his due, there is at least one sentence that had to cost him dearly to see published in a national magazine, and here it is:
In his third run for office, Trump expanded his vote share despite embracing fascist themes of xenophobia, nationalism, and glorification of violence. I didn’t want to see what was happening to the Republican Party, until the durability of Donald Trump made it impossible to ignore.
Then Nichols asks the next obvious question:
Was this a radical, unpredictable metamorphosis, or was a fascist tendency latent in the DNA of the party?
And here was my reaction:
Now you and I both know that, in this life Tom Nichols -- Mr. "Expertise" -- is never gonna call on a dirty, disreputable hippie to explain [checks notes] his own political party to him. However, he did the next best thing.
To better understand the GOP in the years before I joined it, I arranged a Zoom call with Stuart Stevens, a native Mississippian and former Republican operative. Stevens, several years older than I am, joined the Republicans in his youth rather than the segregationist local Democrats, then bolted from the party because of Trump. I asked Stevens to tell me when and where the GOP went wrong, and whether the devolution into a haven for Nazis was inevitable.
For Stevens, racism is the original sin of the modern Republican Party. White voters were alienated by the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the violence around the 1968 Democratic primaries. As Black voters deserted Republicans, the segregationist George Wallace proved with his ’68 presidential run that white southerners were up for grabs. Richard Nixon made a cunning and cynical calculation to sweep up those disaffected white voters, using appeals to “law and order” to stoke racial anxiety. By the 1970s, the GOP was the de facto white party in the United States.
Without Reagan, the Reaganite coalition began to dissolve in the face of Buchanan’s angry populism and Gingrich’s cold opportunism. The Republican Party, as an institution, weakened over time, until it could be hijacked by an aspiring dictator. Republican leaders who warned against Trump in 2016—senators such as Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham, and Mike Lee—soon discarded conservative principles to protect their jobs.
Allow me to repeat that which I have already said a dozen times on this blog and on The Professional Left podcast: it's not a "hijacking" when they throw you the keys and beg you to drive.
And given that the base of the party threw the keys to Trump three times in 10 years...? Sure as shit doesn't sound like a hijacking. Sounds like the fascist Meathead Messiah had arrived and the bigots and imbeciles were and are ecstatic about it.
But the best -- the very best -- use of the view from nowhere comes in the form of a very familiar dodge. A dodge I hadn't heard deployed so brazenly since Matthew Dowd was making the rounds with it.
Nichols, who has a long and well-documented history of dismissing or swatting away criticism of Republicans from the left, suddenly transported himself up, up, up to David Brooks' "view from nowhere" orbital punditing platform where he can safely opine about the deplorable Both Siderism of "Conservatives..." and "People on the right..." --
Conservatives will complain that Democratic Party leaders have often tolerated their own extremists. People on the right point to radical professors lionizing Angela Davis, a Communist Party figure who was once on the FBI’s most-wanted list, or a future president socializing with Bill Ayers, who co-founded a Marxist militant organization and participated in bombings of the U.S. Capitol and the New York Police Department headquarters. Ayers may have casually socialized with a 30-something Barack Obama, but he did not get an office in the West Wing 15 years later. And no one on the left has shown up to work dressed like a conquering Nazi general swanning through the streets of Smolensk, the way Bovino did in the Midwest.
What’s striking isn’t simply that he’s arrived at this realization. After all, the world is full of slow learners and thumb-suckers who need to be told, over and over again, in the immortal words of Wade Garrett, "Don't Eat The Big White Mint."
What's striking is that Nichols is my age and he is only now, grudgingly, arriving at this revelation.
What's striking is that, instead of being some waterhead propping up a wall at a dive bar, Nichols' whole deal is Expertise. Right from jump he'll let you know that, in his expert opinion, he is always the smartest guy in the room.
What's striking is that he holds a column at The Atlantic based on his alleged expertise in this very subject. One he appears to have been in denial about until roughly ten minutes ago.
And so to wrap this up, we circle back to these questions. Why does The Atlantic staff itself with people like this? Why are the people who were right about the Right all along still treated as pariahs? Why are they not only unwelcome in the circles where Tom Nichols, David Brooks, David Frum, and the rest circulate, but are treated as if they do not exist at all?
Because The Atlantic is in the business of telling its audience what it is prepared to hear. Its readers are ready to hear that Donald Trump is as bad as he appears, that the people around him are terrible. But they are not prepared to hear that the Left was right. They cannot bear the thought that the highly paid columnists of legacy media were wrong -- and that their readers were misled along with them -- while the so-called dirty hippies were right all along.
That possibility is unbearable. It’s unthinkable.








