Steve Bannon Hates Libertarians Because *We’re* Not Living in the Real World?

The first of the two times I’ve met Donald Trump was at a 2015 rally protesting the nuclear deal President Obama had announced with Iran. As he rumbled off the stage past the press area, I asked him, “Hey Donald, what do you think about libertarianism?” “I like it, alotta good things,” he said, shortly before brushing me and saying, “I don’t want to talk you right now.”

Assuming he still likes libertarianism and thinks it comprises “a lot of good things, a lot of good points,” he’s very much at odds with his senior adviser Steve Bannon. From Robert Draper’s masterful New York Times Magazine account of the relationship among Trump, Bannon, and House Speaker Paul Ryan:

“What’s that Dostoyevsky line: Happy families are all the same, but unhappy families are unhappy in their own unique ways?” ([Bannon] meant Tolstoy.) “I think the Democrats are fundamentally afflicted with the inability to discuss and have an adult conversation about economics and jobs, because they’re too consumed by identity politics. And then the Republicans, it’s all this theoretical Cato Institute, Austrian economics, limited government — which just doesn’t have any depth to it. They’re not living in the real world.”