Try GOLD - Free
TICKET FROM THE CRYPT
Esquire US
|April - May 2023
Staggering zombielike toward 2024, the GOP is cursed with a presidential front-runner whose influence has waned. But he still has his Republican challengers jumping at shadows.
ARCHAEOLOGISTS FROM NICOLAUS COPERNICUS UNIVERSITY EXCAVATED an interesting grave near the village of Pień in southern Poland last August. A woman had been buried there in the 17th century, laid in the grave faceup with the blade of a sickle across her throat, sharp side down, and a padlock fastened to her toe. The woman, archaeologists surmised, had been killed for being a vampire, and the elaborate interment was devised to keep her from rising again. If she sat up, the blade would instantly behead her. The padlock was largely symbolic, representing the efforts taken by the villagers to avoid a return engagement.
If only politics were so easy.
It's now almost five decades since the Republican party was first bedeviled by its own Undead: an Undead appetite for cruelty in public policy; an Undead attraction to the political use of fear and cultural bogeymen; and an Undead proclivity for causing the same damage, over and over again-running up crippling deficits, following the culture wars to inevitable extremes, and harboring a misbegotten devotion to Dear Leader, whether to Ronald Reagan and his magical supply-side America, or to George W. Bush and his crusade to turn every Middle Eastern despotism into Rhode Island at the point of an RPG, or (finally and most destructively) to Donald J. Trump, who lied worse than Reagan and had lousier foreign policy than Bush. The Undead followed with them all.
And as the putative Republican presidential candidates begin to emerge-Nikki Haley announced formally in February, Ron DeSantis has spent months announcing informally, and Tim Scott and Asa Hutchinson announced that they're pondering whether to announce at all-it has become obvious that they must contend with a powerful new faction of the Undead: the specter of the previous president of the United States.
This story is from the April - May 2023 edition of Esquire US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Esquire US
Esquire US
What I've Learned
Marc Maron Podcaster, comedian, writer, actor; 62; Los Angeles
3 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
THE MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN
His movie adaptation of Wicked earned a gazillion dollars at the box office last year. With a much-hyped sequel set to hit theaters this fall, director Jon M. Chu may be the busiest—and boldest—man in Hollywood.
5 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
A Bag Made for the Journey
BERLUTI'S new PÉRIPLE is soft, sturdy, and something you'll want to reach for EVERY TIME you need to get away for a while
2 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
A RURAL HEALTH-CARE CRISIS IS LOOMING
President Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill slashes Medicaid budgets to shrink Obamacare and fund tax cuts for the wealthy. Now dozens of hospitals in nonurban locations across America may shut down. And the human cost could be incalculable.
6 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
WHAT'S EATING GEORGE CLOONEY?
He's having a career for the ages. He has two adorable kids, a brilliant and beautiful wife, a great new movie, and still has his hair. He enjoys power and influence and is loved by millions, and today he's relaxing at his gorgeous Italian lake house. There's just one problem.
26 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
Time to Shine
Tool watches have had their moment. Now we're GETTING FANCY. These eight TIMEPIECES deliver unmatched SOPHISTICATION and style.
3 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
Getting the Souvenir T-Shirt
YOU KNOW THE ONES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT.
2 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
WHAT IT FEELS LIKE...
Some feats seem unachievable. Climbing Everest in mere days. Kayaking solo across the ocean. Scaling a skyscraper with your bare hands. Few ever face such challenges. Fewer still embrace them with wideopen arms. You're about to read their stories, in their own words-of fear, hope, failure, and triumph, but always passion. This is what it feels like to experience life at its most extraordinary.
16 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
IS ICE A TERRORIST ORGANIZATION?
The question of who in the United States feels safest and for how long—and why—has become the dominant question governing life in this country
5 mins
October/November 2025
Esquire US
COUNT ME IN
Zegna's II Conte jacket is a surprisingly modern lesson in old-school style
1 mins
October/November 2025
Translate
Change font size

