I write as someone who watches democracies closely and worries when their operating norms break down. In recent days a moment of political theater—an offensive, racially charged clip posted and quickly removed from the president’s social feed—has prompted a blunt response from a former president who called the current tenor of politics a “clown show.” That phrase, echoed by a range of commentators and news outlets, captures something real: a mix of spectacle, distraction and norm erosion that is testing civic trust.
What happened — a short recap
- A short video clip circulated on the president’s social platform. Near its end the faces of the country’s former first couple were briefly superimposed on apes, a depiction widely condemned as racist. The clip was removed after bipartisan criticism and intense media coverage. (See reporting from The Hill and ABC News for the timeline and video details.)[1][2]
- The former president described the broader atmosphere of political discourse as a “clown show” in a published interview, saying most Americans find the behavior “deeply troubling.”[1]
- The White House initially downplayed critics’ concerns and called the response “fake outrage”; later, officials said a staffer had posted the clip in error. The president has said he did not see the offensive portion of the video and has not issued an explicit personal apology. Media outlets have published transcripts and recorded exchanges that document these public statements.[2][3]
- “I think it’s important to recognize that the majority of the American people find this behavior deeply troubling,” the former president said in a wide-ranging interview that was reported by multiple outlets.[1]
- Media organizations and commentators have described the episode as part of a pattern in which inflammatory social posts draw attention away from policy and governance. Television panels and news analyses emphasize both the symbolic harm of the image and the political arithmetic that may drive such posts: distraction, base mobilization, and culture-war signaling.[3]
- Elected officials reacted across the spectrum: some Republicans publicly criticized the clip as unacceptable and urged its removal; others framed the controversy as manufactured outrage. Democratic-aligned voices described it as evidence of a broader descent in public norms. Local and national civil-rights groups joined the chorus of condemnation.
(For contemporaneous reporting, see coverage from CBS News, ABC, and other outlets that documented the comments, the video, and lawmakers’ responses.)[2][3][4]
Historical context and comparisons
Comparisons to previous periods of U.S. political rancor are instructive but imperfect. American politics has seen intensely personal and destabilizing moments before—Watergate-era abuses, McCarthy-era demagoguery, and other episodes when institutions strained. What is different now is the velocity and scale of amplification: social platforms can make a moment go global in seconds and can harden outrage into political fuel that is then reused.
Two key differences stand out:
- Speed and permanence: A single post can be scraped, reposted and replayed almost indefinitely, prolonging harm and complicating remediation efforts.
- Institutional responses: Historically, norms and institutional checks—courts, committees, media gatekeepers—acted as dampers. Those mechanisms exist today, but their ability to shape public perception has been weakened by polarization and diminishing cross-cutting trust.
Why this matters for democracy
There are three practical implications worth highlighting:
- Legitimacy erosion: When rhetoric from the presidency or other top offices normalizes demeaning depictions of political opponents or citizens, it chips away at the perceived legitimacy of institutions.
- Distraction from governance: Spectacle diverts attention from policy debates—on inflation, public safety, health care, housing—that affect everyday life. That can reduce accountability by shifting the news cycle away from measurable outcomes.
- Polarization feedback loop: Outrage-driven posts reward extreme behavior with attention. That feedback encourages repetition, raising the risk that norms will be replaced by calculated transgression.
These dynamics do not automatically produce authoritarian outcomes, but they lower the bar for democratic backsliding by eroding the shared assumptions—civility, decorum, mutual restraint—that sustain pluralistic governance.
Reactions from different vantage points
- Public opinion signals: Polling and anecdotal reporting suggest many citizens are weary of constant outrage and find such content troubling; some segments, however, respond positively when they see cultural or partisan affirmation.
- Media and analysts: Newsrooms and commentators are divided between condemning the content and questioning whether covering it amplifies the very spectacle it creates. That tension frames editorial decisions in real time.
- Institutional actors: Congressional statements and party strategists are weighing both the moral and political implications—whether to condemn forcefully, distance, or downplay the episode for electoral calculation.
A balanced reading
This moment contains both accountability and a caution. Accountability demands clear condemnation of racist imagery and institutional remedies to prevent recurrence. The caution is that reacting entirely in the language of outrage can make politics performative rather than corrective. Responsible leadership requires naming the harm, disciplining or correcting those responsible where appropriate, and returning attention to policy choices that determine people’s lives.
Closing takeaway
As a writer who studies civic life I find this episode worrying not only for the specific insult it contained but for what it signals: a growing comfort with spectacle over substance. Democracies survive by renewing shared commitments—truthful information, institutional norms, and mutual restraint—even when politics is fierce. The urgent test for leaders and citizens is whether we will treat such moments as teachable crises that restore standards, or as routine fuel for the next wave of spectacle. My hope is that institutions, civil society and voters choose repair over resignation.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.
References
[1] Reporting and excerpts from The Hill on the interview and the clip: https://thehill.com/ (see related coverage Feb. 2026)
[2] ABC News summary of the post and responses: https://abcnews.go.com/ (coverage Feb. 2026)
[3] CBS News reporting and transcript excerpts: https://www.cbsnews.com/ (coverage Feb. 2026)
[4] Additional contemporaneous summaries and regional reporting: https://www.tribuneindia.com/ and other outlets (Feb. 2026).
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