Mark Esper, President Trump’s last confirmed Secretary of Defense, has been the toast of all the networks this week for his new memoir, starting with the high-profile debut on “60 Minutes” with CBS anchor Norah O’Donnell. There was then CNN, MSNBC, PBS, NPR and Fox News.
That doesn’t even count the massive sharing of soundbites from these interviews, mostly dedicated to the unending hunger for “tell us all the crazy crap Trump said next” anecdotes. The last president’s failure to accept the certified election results and his failure to call off January 6 rioters may be the craziest stuff.
Other than Bret Baier of Fox News – surely the most skeptical of the lot – the toughest question Esper faced was how could he stand ever taking a job with Trump, and why on Earth did he hang around?
Put that parade aside for a minute for a much more general point about “tell-all books.” Try for a few minutes to remember the tell-all books that emerged from Bill Clinton’s cabinet and White House inner circle. Perhaps you have some ideas. Cabinet Locked by Labor Secretary Robert Reich (1997). That wasn’t a rip-roaring “tell-all.” Then there’s All Too Human by George Stephanopoulos (1999). The network interviewers threw questions about how he looked like an “ingrate” and a “backstabber,” inquiries which aren’t often thrown at Republican tattlers. He had become an ABC News superstar by then.
In his memoir, former FBI Director Louis Freeh criticized Clinton. My FBI, and that made 60 Minutes, but that was in 2005, which was not exactly timely.
Then repeat the imaginative exercise and attempt to list the “tell-all” books from Barack Obama’s cabinet and inner circle. Okay, that’s too funny to contemplate, as if anyone would dare toss gossipy dirt at Barack and Michelle Obama, revered like secular saints. One could joke that Obama’s cabinet couldn’t be defined as “insiders,” since he didn’t meet them much.
This is not to say that conservative authors and conservative publishers didn’t write critical books, but the “mainstream” networks and newspapers weren’t going to treat them like anything but “tabloid trash.”
Here’s the point of the exercise. This is the slow-motion liberal media version of book publishing. The same ideological instincts are present in all of their books, as well as the same desires for who to praise and who to destroy. We had many Ronald Reagan-ripping books both before and after Reagan’s presidency. Similar, Bushes also have been immersed in hot literary oil many times.
Trump was then born. “Tell-all” book season started before the first anniversary of his inauguration — with Michael Wolff’s shakily sourced Fire and Fury. Four years later, Esper is merely the latest. Publishers could count on ex-Republicans and bitter Democrats to grab every gossipy morsel, from Omarosa through Anthony Scaramucci up to Mary Trump.
This is true for newspaper giants such as Bob Woodward who wrote a trio of anti-Trump books entitled Fear, Rage, and Peril.
So it’s not too early to speculate that there will be no “tell-all” season for insider books on the Biden White House. Instead, the pro-Biden media just performed a cream-puff carousel for Joe Biden’s sister Valerie discussing her book Growing Up Biden. They already demonstrated their pathetic toothlessness in promoting Hunter Biden’s memoir.
Unless there’s another Trump book, Bob Woodward might have to spend the next few years writing on some other Washington bigfoot, like he once did for Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan. He might even write a book about the amazing bureaucratic insider Anthony Fauci.