When Ronald Reagan sought the Republican Party’s presidential nomination in 1980, it was an open question as to whether the former governor’s family life would be perceived disqualifying. Voters had never before elected a divorced president, and there was great uncertainty about whether the electorate was prepared to put aside this apparent taboo.
When Bill Clinton sought the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination 1992, the then-governor publicly conceded that he’d “caused pain” in his marriage — an apparent euphemism for adultery. This, too, generated ample discussion about the limits of what Americans were prepared to tolerate from their candidates for national office with regard to “character issues.”
These quaint lines of inquiry came to mind reading this Politico summary of Stormy Daniels’ testimony this morning in Donald Trump’s ongoing criminal trial in New York City. After prosecutors assured the court that there wouldn’t be any “descriptions of genitalia” during the proceedings, there were “awkward moments” in the courtroom as the porn star talked about her alleged sexual encounter in Trump’s hotel room at a California golf resort in 2006 — a year after Trump married Melania Trump.
“I had my clothes and my shoes off. I believe my bra was still on. We were in missionary position,” Daniels said. Defense jumps in to object. The judge sustains the objection. One female juror looks uncomfortable with the comments and is looking away while holding her forehead.
I’m imagining a thought experiment in which I had a conversation with political observers from decades past. “Well, Americans elected a television personality to the nation’s highest office,” I’d say, “and after he was thrown out of office for being a corrupt and incompetent failure, he was accused of several dozen felonies, including falsifying business records related to the hush-money payments he made to a porn star he allegedly had sex with while cheating on his third wife.”
“Oh,” I’d add, “and this is barely in the top 10 of the biggest scandals surrounding the former president.”
It’s at this point that I’d wait for the inevitable questions about whether social conservatives and evangelicals consider the defendant one of the biggest villains in modern American life, leading me to explain, “Actually, they revere him with borderline-religious reverence.”
The New York Times had an interesting report the other day on Trump’s youngest supporters, many of whom will be voting in their first elections this year, who don’t quite remember what American politics was like before.








