Has Donald Trump finally split the Republican
party?
With only a few more weeks before Biden takes over,
significant segments of the party are finally breaking with the president
Martin
Pengelly
@MartinPengelly
Thu 24 Dec
2020 08.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/24/republicans-trump-gop-split-party
After four
years of norm-shattering rule, Donald Trump appears close to doing the one
thing observers have long predicted but that has not yet come to pass:
splitting the Republican party.
With Trump
staring at the prospect of only a few more weeks in the White House,
significant segments of the party are finally breaking with a president to whom
they have hitherto displayed almost unwavering loyalty. Furthermore, Trump’s
stoking of division in his own party has even succeeded in uniting warring
factions among his opponents.
Responding
on Wednesday night to the president’s bombshell threat to veto the $900bn Covid
relief and stimulus bill, Democratic leaders and members of the progressive
House “Squad” – otherwise at each other’s throats – welcomed Trump’s demand for
increased direct payments to individual Americans.
Somewhere
on Capitol Hill, presumably, Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell
buried his head in his hands.
‘Send me a
suitable bill, or else’
Predictions
that Trump will wreck and split the Republican party have been rife since 2015,
when he wrecked and split – and won – the race for the presidential nomination.
While the party remains whole, and an official split will be a surprise, it has
now descended into internecine strife, Trump loyalists fighting for the lost cause
of a second term while others seek to adjust to life back in opposition.
Trump
maintains a strong hold on the hard-right Republican base, on a large part of
the House delegation who owe their seats to that base and on influential
senators. The penalty for apostasy is clear: a primary from the right or, as
rumour has it in the case of the Florida senator Marco Rubio, a challenge from
Trump’s own daughter.
But in
contrast to the zeal of the Maga-fuelled legions, in the Senate the party
establishment has now rejected Trump’s increasingly wild attempts to hold on to
power while negotiating the Covid deal which stoked Tuesday night’s
extraordinary display of presidential petulance from the White House podium.
In his
video message, Trump bemoaned spending commitments in the relief deal and
demanded Congress “send me a suitable bill, or else the next administration
will have to deliver a Covid relief package. And maybe that administration will
be me.”
It won’t,
even if Trump’s allies in the House and Senate go through with planned
challenges to the electoral college result in Congress on 6 January. Democrats
who control the House will ensure the result is certified there, while
McConnell and his deputies assure passage in the Senate.
But if such
challenges can only be performative, they will be politically beneficial for
everyone except the Republican establishment which will help to beat them down.
Trump’s refusal to accept defeat, not to mention the vicious fire he and his
allies have directed at McConnell since the senator recognised Joe Biden’s win,
is damaging the president’s own party.
A day
before the electoral college result is certified, two run-off elections in
Georgia will decide control of the Senate. Early voting has started. Seeking to
hold on to the party’s best hope of thwarting Biden’s agenda, McConnell needs a
united front. Such is Trump’s refusal to accept party discipline or political
reality, that has become impossible.
Georgia’s
two sitting senators, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, have thrown in their
lots with Trump. That means supporting his claim the presidential election was
rigged, which the party establishment fears could suppress Republican turnout.
‘A
different course’
On CNN last
weekend, the Utah senator and 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney, a frequent
Trump critic, was asked if he “still recognised the Republican party”.
“The party
has taken a different course than obviously the one that I knew as a younger
person,” Romney said, adding that his Republican party stood for leading abroad
while “balancing the budget” at home.
“And we
believed that character was essential in the leaders that we chose. We’ve
strayed from that. I don’t see us returning to that for a long time.”
The remark
about character was pointed. Romney went on to describe a battle to succeed
Trump at the top of the party that promises to be as life was to Thomas Hobbes:
nasty and brutish, if long-term rather than short.
“As I look
at the 2024 contenders,” Romney said, “most of them are trying to become as
much like Donald Trump as they can be. Although I must admit that his style and
schtick, if you will, is difficult to duplicate.”
Of
necessity, ambitious senators such as Josh Hawley of Missouri, Tom Cotton of
Arkansas and Ted Cruz of Texas would have taken that as a compliment – but also
a warning. Trump is reportedly likely to announce his own candidacy for 2024
not long after removal from office.
“I
represent a very small slice of the Republican party today,” Romney continued,
“but you know everybody has to stand up for what they believe. And I believe my
colleagues are doing what they think is right.”
For some
Republicans, Trump has already proven too much.
The party remains in one piece. Whether it stays so
remains to be seen
Outside
Congress, the Never Trumpers of the Lincoln Project, the Bulwark and other
groups fought for Biden while former Republican voters helped turn Georgia and
Arizona blue. Inside Congress, a few have taken a stand. The common way out is
to retire but two House members from Michigan, Justin Amash last year and Paul
Mitchell this, found the courage to publicly leave their party.
Such
numbers are small. The party remains in one piece. Whether it stays so remains
to be seen. In the brewing fight, those ranged against Trump are not ready to
quit.
Writing for
the Washington Post in November, long before Trump’s refusal to concede defeat
mutated into considerations of martial law, the conservative columnist Jennifer
Rubin said the US effectively has “three parties now: the Democratic party, the
Anti-Democracy Trump party and the Pro-Democracy Republican party.”
Rubin
advocated a bipartisan effort to restore balance, writing: “Once the
Anti-Democracy Trump party is marginalised we might have functional government
again. The Democratic party and the Pro-Democracy Republican party should put
their heads together and devise a strategy to bring that about – quickly, and
certainly before 2024.”
Romney has
disappointed Democrats before, not least over the appointment of supreme court
justice Amy Coney Barrett. But he seems to be up for the fight.
“I think
I’m more effective in the Republican party, continuing to battle for the things
I believe in,” he said, when asked if he would leave. “I think ultimately the
Republican party will return to the roots that have been formed over the last
century.
“Hopefully
people will recognise we need to take a different course than the one we’re on
right now.”


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