Trump’s Free-Speech War­rior?

Trump’s Free-Speech Warrior?

Trump’s Free-Speech War­rior?

Behind the cur­tain with Dar­ren Beat­tie, one of the new president’s most provoca­tive per­son­nel picks.

Darren-Beattie-8x10-1-scaled
(U.S. Depart­ment of State)

“Every­thing is pos­si­ble with Don­ald Trump,” one State Depart­ment source famil­iar with the hir­ing told The Amer­i­can Con­ser­v­a­tive

This per­son was speak­ing of the shock reten­tion of Dar­ren Beat­tie as the act­ing under­sec­re­tary of state for pub­lic diplo­ma­cy and pub­lic affairs. Amid the blitzkrieg—“days of thun­der” as the for­mer Trump chief strate­gist Steve Ban­non has put it—of pol­i­cy shake-ups, out­ré cab­i­net selec­tions, and vin­tage pop­ulist blus­ter that have char­ac­ter­ized the new admin­is­tra­tion in its ear­ly months, per­haps no move is more “Trump 2.0” than the ele­va­tion of Beat­tie. 

Because after years in the ver­i­ta­ble dig­i­tal wilder­ness (where his pro­file only grew, and, some might say, became a leg­end), Beat­tie is back in the sad­dle at Wash­ing­ton. 

Oust­ed from the White House speechwriter’s office in late sum­mer 2018 dur­ing Don­ald Trump’s first stint in pow­er, the orig­i­nal scan­dal that did Beat­tie in now seems down­right passé—like some­thing that the key Trump backer Elon Musk might post out unedit­ed in 2025, and or Vice Pres­i­dent J.D. Vance would engage with on X. Beattie’s (even then open­ly Googleable) address to the obscure H.L. Menck­en Club was exca­vat­ed by CNN, and he was sacked from the Trump team by estab­lish­ment appa­ratchiks that are a far rar­er, more cowed breed in Trump’s sec­ond tour as pres­i­dent. 

In the years since, the scan­dal (per­verse­ly for oppo­si­tion-mind­ed, lib­er­al jour­nal­ists) seems to have served only to bol­ster Beattie’s myth and enhance his pro­file. 

Few fig­ures show­case the flip­side of can­cel­la­tion in Amer­i­can life bet­ter than Beat­tie; few nota­bles bet­ter embody the “post-woke” moment Amer­i­ca has sup­pos­ed­ly now entered. In exile, 2018–25, Beat­tie found­ed Revolver News: a no-holds-barred right-wing aggre­ga­tor that aimed (with no small suc­cess) to sup­plant Drudge Report, which many in the Trump fold see as utter­ly way­ward. Beat­tie became a “friend of the show” on Bannon’s instru­men­tal War Room pod­cast, where he cul­ti­vat­ed a Strangelov­ian pres­ence and mys­tique. 

I’ve known Beat­tie for years. Dur­ing the pre­vi­ous admin­is­tra­tion, I would greet him as “my favorite Biden admin­is­tra­tion offi­cial” for his ser­vice on the U.S. Com­mis­sion for the Preser­va­tion of America’s Her­itage Abroad, which extend­ed into the 46th president’s term. A shot­gun appoint­ment in the hel­ter-skel­ter final days of the first Trump tour, it would take a year before the Democ­rats either got around or fig­ured out how to fire him. 

Behind closed doors, as a gov­ern­ment offi­cial or as a civil­ian philoso­pher, Beat­tie is care­ful, diplo­mat­ic, even reserved. Bar none, he was the most pro­fes­sion­al, ide­o­log­i­cal­ly-com­mit­ted inter­locu­tor I dealt with in the ear­ly Trump White House, which oth­er­wise could be char­ac­ter­ized, with few qual­i­fi­ca­tions, as a shock­ing clown show of man­darins who had lit­tle idea, and lit­tle real inter­est in, why Don­ald Trump had just been elect­ed pres­i­dent.

But this char­ac­ter­i­za­tion of Beat­tie the person—surgical, not garrulous—may shock those only famil­iar with Beat­tie the per­sona. In a way, his sto­ry and style are inescapably 2020s: Bolt-from-the-blue exclu­sives with Imran Khan, the jailed Pak­istani crick­et star-turned–prime minister–turned-opposition leader, “for the ’gram” are inter­spersed with car­toon degra­da­tions of the Dis­patch edi­tor Jon­ah Gold­berg. Both are put to the side when work­ing for the U.S. sec­re­tary of state.    

When Beat­tie ini­tial­ly shot to atten­tion, in the 2015–16 era, he was the only non-tenured aca­d­e­m­ic in the coun­try pub­licly to endorse Trump for pres­i­dent. It was a con­sid­er­able risk. Beat­tie had been a math prodi­gy at UChica­go before piv­ot­ing to a polit­i­cal the­o­ry PhD at Duke, where he lat­er taught. A pro­tege of the Leo Strauss guru Nathan Tar­cov, Beattie’s choic­es meant breaks not only with the well-worn (if pre­car­i­ous) path of Amer­i­can acad­e­mia, but also with the mal­func­tion­ing con­ser­v­a­tive clerisy that Trump’s rise has so humil­i­at­ed. 

There are oth­er details that are pecu­liar about Beat­tie. Orig­i­nal­ly from Den­ver, he was actu­al­ly par­tial­ly reared in Palau, the Microne­sian island even few State Depart­ment offi­cials could locate on a map. His father was recruit­ed to be a supreme court jus­tice in that repub­lic. (Elon Musk could only dream that the U.S. judi­cia­ry were so anar­cho-cap­i­tal­ist.) In pri­vate cor­re­spon­dence over the years, one gets the sense from Beat­tie that upon his return to the States, he bare­ly rec­og­nized the coun­try he had left behind. What moti­vates his pol­i­tics then is per­haps unsur­pris­ing, and per­haps lit­tle dif­fer­ent than many of the “for­got­ten men and women” the pres­i­dent says he rep­re­sents. 

But why this job, why this role and why now?

To allies, it’s no real sur­prise. Beat­tie is per­haps a bet­ter fit here than he ever was at the speechwriter’s office, a den of influ­en­tial but often thank­less work. In com­ments on the cir­cuit in 2016, Beat­tie made clear that his shock sup­port for Trump was based on two rea­sons: the future president’s rev­o­lu­tion in Repub­li­can for­eign pol­i­cy, and the then-candidate’s adamance on the immi­gra­tion issue. 

Most of all to some of his now-col­leagues, Beat­tie vault­ed to promi­nence by insist­ing that  spon­sor­ing “col­or rev­o­lu­tions” in for­eign coun­tries is a sta­ple of con­tem­po­rary U.S. state­craft and heav­i­ly insin­u­at­ing the Jan­u­ary 6, 2021 riot at the Capi­tol was an inside job. The lat­ter claim’s promi­nence peaked with a 60 Min­utes inter­view with Sen­a­tor Ted Cruz ask­ing pub­licly, “Who is Ray Epps?”

Nor on the third leg of the tra­di­tion­al Trumpian stool, reform­ing “free” trade, has Beat­tie been bash­ful. 

Writ­ing in Nation­al Review in 2017, Beat­tie argued, 

[BLOCK]From the imme­di­ate aban­don­ment of the Trans-Pacif­ic Part­ner­ship (TPP), to the recent ‘hire Amer­i­can buy Amer­i­can’ exec­u­tive order, to the strong like­li­hood of seri­ous and impor­tant steps to rene­go­ti­ate NAFTA, there is much in Pres­i­dent Trump’s actions thus far in his term to encour­age his eco­nom­ic-nation­al­ist base.[/BLOCK]

He con­tin­ued, 

[BLOCK]Conservatives and lib­er­tar­i­ans who remain shack­led to a Cold War eco­nom­ic ide­ol­o­gy ought to take note that Mil­ton Fried­man him­self stat­ed that his chief pur­pose was not to advo­cate for one spe­cif­ic eco­nom­ic agen­da over anoth­er but rather to pro­tect indi­vid­ual lib­er­ties and free enter­prise from the threats of con­cen­trat­ed power.[/BLOCK]

“Pro­tect­ing indi­vid­ual lib­er­ties” appears to have become Beattie’s self-jus­ti­fi­ca­tion in recent years.

To friends, Beat­tie has praised (with some appar­ent sur­prise) the lead­er­ship of his boss, Mar­co Rubio. The sec­re­tary has deployed Beat­tie as the tip of the spear on what is increas­ing­ly being termed “free speech diplo­ma­cy” by not only the Sev­enth Floor at Fog­gy Bot­tom, but also the vice president’s office. (See Vance’s “shock and awe” address at the 2025 Munich Secu­ri­ty Con­fer­ence denounc­ing Euro­pean speech and demo­c­ra­t­ic con­trols.) 

Rubio’s own com­mit­ment to free speech appears robust enough that he hasn’t sacked Beat­tie for past bait­ing com­ments about the now-sec­re­tary. (Beattie’s allies would insist he was in “shock jock” mode, but crit­ics might com­plain that it’s con­ve­nient that he gets to pick and choose).

This is no sideshow work. Beat­tie appears to be in the thick of it. In late March, Trump’s gov­ern­ment made clear that there would be no free trade agree­ment with the lum­ber­ing post-Brex­it British state if Lon­don didn’t com­ply with free speech stan­dards. An arti­cle in the Tele­graph to this effect roiled West­min­ster, despite Prime Min­is­ter Keir Starmer’s sur­pris­ing­ly con­vivial rela­tion­ship with Trump. 

The vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty here, of course, is that the admin­is­tra­tion is crack­ing down in par­al­lel on crit­i­cism of Israel’s for­ev­er war in Gaza and the broad­er Mid­dle East. The risk for free speech war­riors in this admin­is­tra­tion is the appear­ance of hypocrisy, and build­ing a two-tiered moral sys­tem. Beat­tie, the polit­i­cal philoso­pher, is said to see it prag­mat­i­cal­ly: You don’t throw out the good with the bad, and such deci­sions are above his pay grade.

Which rais­es the ques­tion: Is he play­ing the long game, and in DC to stay?

Beat­tie decamped to South Flori­da, the world head­quar­ters of Repub­li­can exile, in the Biden years. Is this sec­ond tour a vic­to­ry lap or the start of some­thing big­ger? Not yet 40, the pres­i­dent is twice his age. Might Beat­tie ride the rails of gov­ern­ment for years and admin­is­tra­tions to come? It’s sud­den­ly a star­tling plau­si­bil­i­ty. 

The admin­is­tra­tion is unlike­ly to sub­ject him to any Sen­ate con­fir­ma­tion bat­tle (although see­ing Beat­tie joust with cer­tain mem­bers of the upper cham­ber would be must-watch). If the Trump per­son­nel carousel starts revving up again, any­one who sur­vives could prof­it. Indeed, if Trump even­tu­al­ly dis­pens­es with Nation­al Secu­ri­ty Advi­sor Michael Waltz, State Depart­ment Pol­i­cy Plan­ning Direc­tor Michael Anton is seen as a ringer for the role. Could Beat­tie replace Anton?

What­ev­er the con­tin­gen­cies, Beattie’s bet on Don­ald Trump might only now be matur­ing.

The post Trump’s Free-Speech War­rior? appeared first on The Amer­i­can Con­ser­v­a­tive.