Rubin: The unnamed op-ed writer can’t be pleased

No one, it seems, views this author positively. Trump cultists, of course, see this person as a “traitor.” Trump’s harshest critics denounce this person who serves the president but won’t sign his name to an op-ed. In their eyes, he is a cowering enabler.|

I do not believe that the unnamed New York Times op-ed writer, who warns us the president is unfit for office, is of Cabinet rank. Surely anyone at that level would know they would be asked and would have to deny authorship, but since the op-ed writer thinks of themselves as honorable, they wouldn't want to lie. And in any event, a “big” name would have no reason to write anonymously; they would quit and get a book deal.

It therefore makes more sense that the writer is a level or two down the food chain from a Cabinet secretary. These are the sorts of people allowed to attend the deputy-level meetings of the National Security Council (deputy secretaries of treasury, defense or state, for example). They aren't household names; they don't generally get book deals or make the front pages of newspapers when they are fired or quit. And these are, by the way, the same sorts of people who joined the administration, rationalizing their decision, and who are now being inundated with I-told-you-so's from friends, family and colleagues who warned their participation in this administration would be akin to selling their souls.

Given the op-ed's emphasis on foreign policy, the author no doubt knew, maybe very well, Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, who was eulogized by two presidents last Saturday in Washington National Cathedral. Perhaps the writer's conscience had been pricked. He needs to believe (and have others believe) that he could serve in this White House honorably. He insists he hasn't been destroying conservatism but, like the monks of the Dark Ages, squirreling away treasure for a time when the Trumpian cloud lifts. (The phrase “free minds, free markets and free people” is straight from the young Republicans' Russell Kirk collection. This is no protectionist or anti-immigrant zealot, but someone who imagines he's bending politics to the right.)

Assuming all this is correct - it may be wildly off base - what does a defensive, never-a-top-tier player do? He probably resigns by the end of the year, having put in two years with an administration. His op-ed is the first draft of the rationalization he will give to friends, relatives and prospective employers.

But here's the problem: No one, it seems, views this author positively. Trump cultists, of course, see this person as a “traitor.” Trump's harshest critics denounce this person who serves the president but won't sign his name to an op-ed. In their eyes, he is a cowering enabler.

And the Washington establishment - where this person will likely want to keep operating - has become, if anything, even more severe in its judgment: You cannot be honorable if you are silent in what appears to be an incapacitated, antidemocratic presidency. You're an enabler.

In short, somewhere in a West Wing or department office, a nervous adviser is trying to blend into the walls, keep his head down. He likely didn't get what he wanted - balm for his inflamed conscience. And worse, the chief “saviors” are gone or soon to go from Cabinet jobs, leaving fewer guardrails and putting the country further at risk.

No, the anonymous author didn't get what he wanted; instead he may have made his own (and the country's) predicament worse.

Jennifer Rubin is a columnist for the Washington Post.

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