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Book review: How ‘bad guys’ planned victory

October 27, 2017 13:30
AP_17152696813642
3 min read

Devil’s Bargain, Joshua Green’s highly readable account of the relationship between Steve Bannon and Donald Trump, should carry a health warning. There is something about the cast of characters — a collection of far-right activists, oddball billionaires, and political opportunists — littering its pages that can leave readers feeling queasy.

The principal supporting actor in this grim production is Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist. A conservative Catholic from a working-class, Irish-American home, his “kaleidoscope career” — encompassing spells in the navy, Goldman Sachs and Hollywood — settled on politics just over a decade ago after a chance meeting with Andrew Breitbart.

One of that rare breed of Jewish conservative activists, Breitbart was about to launch his eponymous news website. With Breitbart’s encouragement, Bannon, who had been “dabbling in minor Hollywood moguldom”, began to churn out right-wing documentaries. Breitbart — whose journalistic ethics are such that Fox News barred him as an on-air guest — admiringly termed him “the Leni Riefenstahl of the Tea Party movement”.

With Breitbart’s sudden death in 2012, Bannon was thrust centre-stage. Taking the helm at Breitbart News, he doubled-down on its founder’s vision. With its racially charged, populist agenda, the site became the flagship of the alt-right, the “rolling tumbleweed of wounded male id and aggression”, which would later provide many of the online warriors in Trump’s campaign.