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There Is No Deep State – Reuel Marc Gerecht

It’s become gospel in much of the American right that a liberal “deep state” exists, forming an alternate government that works against Donald Trump and the Republican Party. “Either the deep state destroys America,” Trump declared during his first major rally of his last campaign, “or we destroy the deep state.” This supposed pernicious matrix is spread throughout the press and the federal bureaucracies, though most dangerously embedded in the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the rest of the Justice Department.  

The oft-heard wish among Republicans to move some agencies out of Washington is, in part, a way to break this conspiracy by staffing the government with like-minded souls from red states. For troublesome “elite” bureaucracies that must stay in D.C., the militant right still wants to humble them. The leaked White House plan for State Department reform, which Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected, aimed to neuter “deep state” pretensions by eliminating the foreign-service exam, which, the document’s authors surely assumed, rewards the schooling and aptitude of folks likely to have strong Democratic sympathies.

Trumpians are conceding something that Reaganites never would have—that the better educated are irretrievably aligned against them. They are also confessing their own managerial inadequacy: No matter how many presidentially appointed “Schedule C” assistant secretaries Trumpians put on top, they can’t, apparently, successfully manage liberals. History actually suggests the opposite: Diplomats have routinely executed hardline foreign policies when guided by talented conservatives. Many Washington liberals looked askance at Elliott Abrams when he was Ronald Reagan’s assistant secretary for Latin American affairs precisely because he was so effective at getting foreign-service officers to execute right-wing policies in Central America. As effective, in a less collegial way, was John Bolton during both Bush presidencies. 

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