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Leonard Pitts: In Trump they trust

But the FBI is another matter.

In this Feb. 2, 2018, photo, President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with North Korean defectors where he talked with reporters about allowing the release of a secret memo on the FBI's role in the Russia inquiry, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. Ignoring the objections of the Justice Department and warnings from his own staff, Trump’s authorization of the release of a bitterly disputed, formerly highly classified memo was his latest contentious move to upend the investigation into his campaign’s ties to Russia or whether the president obstructed justice.(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

So apparently this is now Republican Party doctrine:

You can’t trust the news media. They’re biased.

You can’t trust the CIA. They’re hacks.

You can’t trust the Justice Department. It’s unfair.

You can’t trust the FBI. It’s disgraceful.

But you can trust Donald Trump.

Notwithstanding the bankruptcies, the fraud settlement, the admitted sexual assaults, the litany of lies about everything from crowd size to approval ratings to Inauguration Day weather, his word is golden. From Rep. Devin Nunes’ pathetically transparent attempts to save Trump from himself in the Russia probe to poll numbers indicating GOP voters would, indeed, support him even if he stood in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shot somebody, the party implicitly insists this self-interested con artist is a good man.

In Trump they trust. But the FBI is another matter.

The bizarreness of this cannot be overstated. Nor can the hypocrisy and the gutlessness. But we are here to talk about the danger.

For almost 50 years, Americans have fretted over the erosion of trust in our government. Well, erosion has now become destruction.

This has been a long time coming, of course. For years, Americans lived in blissful assurance that if the government said it, it must be true. Then came a watershed called Watergate. Following hard on the heels of the Pentagon Papers’ revelations that the government lied us into a war it knew to be unwinnable, this tale of dirty tricks, lies and cover-ups in the Nixon White House shredded the nation’s faith in its leaders in ways that have reverberated down the intervening decades.

A little skepticism toward government is probably not a bad thing. But we have far more than a little. In 1958, 73 percent of us trusted the government to do the right thing all or most of the time, according to a Pew Research Center Poll. Last year, 18 percent did.

Similarly, it is not the worst thing in the world if people are a little dubious of the news business. But a national news media approval rate of 11 percent among Republicans — this, also, from the folks at Pew — goes far beyond dubiousness.

The point is that there was already a surplus of ill will toward government and news media. Now, here comes Trump, pushing ill will toward critical mass with daily tirades against career spies, lawyers, cops and reporters. He doesn’t do it to help the country. He doesn’t even do it to help his party.

No, as with most things Trump does, he does it to help himself. Knock down media credibility, and his partisans find it easier to overlook reports of his incompetence and sleaze. Knock down CIA credibility, and you no longer have to justify kowtowing to Vladimir Putin. Knock down FBI and DOJ credibility, and there goes the Russia investigation.

And never mind that in knocking down media, law enforcement and intelligence gathering, Trump topples pillars of American democracy. Never mind that democracy is something we considered sacred not too long ago.

Never mind. Republicans acquiesce in these acts of intellectual vandalism. And they should be ashamed.

Yes, there will inevitably come moments when institutions disappoint and yes, one is obligated to challenge them when they do. But this is not that. This is dangerous distrust sown for political gain by an opportunistic narcissist. And it’s working. Already a new Reuters poll says that 73 percent of Republicans now think the FBI is unfair to Trump — 73 percent.

Is this country in trouble now?

You’d better believe it.

Leonard Pitts | The Miami Herald

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may contact him via e-mail at lpitts@miamiherald.com.