Different President, Same Song: Trump Pulls a Nixon in His Battle Against The Boss
Bruce Springsteen isn’t the first rock star to face the ire of a pushy POTUS. Fifty years ago, Richard Nixon went to war against John Lennon over the former Beatle’s peacenik politics.
Before Donald Trump took to Truth Social to rage against Bruce Springsteen — calling him a “dried out ‘prune’ of a rocker” and threatening ominously that “we’ll all see how it goes for him” — another American president once tried to silence a politically outspoken rock star.
But Richard Nixon didn’t just tweet insults at John Lennon. He tried to deport him.
That 1970s-era culture war — now resurrected in a new doc, One to One: John & Yoko — echoes eerily in Trump’s latest feud with American music royalty. Lennon, a British citizen with a U.S. green card living in New York at the time, had aligned himself with the radical left and spoken out forcefully against the Vietnam War and Nixon’s re-election. The Nixon administration responded by weaponizing immigration law, trying to boot Lennon back to the UK over an old pot bust. It was a thin pretext, and everyone knew it.
FBI files were opened. Surveillance began. Lennon became a target. The former Beatle hit back the only way he knew how, through his music. “I’ve had enough of reading things by neurotic, psychotic, pig-headed politicians,” he sang in “Gimme Some Truth,” the song that opens the second side of 1971’s Imagine. “No short-haired, yellow-bellied son of Tricky Dick is going to Mother Hubbard soft soap me.”
Finally, in 1975, after years of legal battles, a federal court shut down the case, calling it “selective deportation based on secret political grounds.” But the damage had already been done: Lennon’s activism had been effectively neutered. And five years later, at just 40, Lennon was gunned down by a deranged fan outside his home on New York’s upper west side.
Nearly fifty years later, Trump......
Source: hollywoodreporter.com/Steve Bloom