Why Trump Is Losing His Grip on the GOP
He rose to power denouncing the phoniness of politics.
Now he is pro-phony.
By JOHN F.
HARRIS
03/24/2022
04:30 AM EDT
Altitude is
a column by POLITICO founding editor John Harris, offering weekly perspective
on politics in a moment of radical disruption.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/03/24/trump-losing-gop-00019941
It strains
memory now to recall that when Donald Trump first shoved his way into
presidential politics seven years ago this spring, and soon after humiliated a
long parade of establishment Republicans, his appeal to voters had a coherent
dimension.
That is, it
was based on a sustained argument that many Americans regarded as credible. The
most powerful part of that argument was about the nature of establishment
politics in both parties: It was the province of weak and contemptible people.
Conventional politicians were calculating, careerist, cowardly — willing to
sacrifice principle and the interests of ordinary Americans to suit their own
interests. In short, the problem with American politics was that it was
dominated by phonies.
Trump’s
personality and history gave him special ability to make the phoniness
indictment. Journalists and biographers have yet to find a chapter in Trump’s
75 years when he might be described as honest in the conventional sense of that
word — someone who tells the truth and follows the rules because it is the
right thing to do, even when it is disadvantageous to do so.
But just
because Trump is someone who is comfortable lying — anyone paying attention has
known that since the 1980s — he was not at the outset of his political career
defined by artifice. His grandiose self-conception, his vanity, his gleeful
satyriasis — these are common traits in politicians, but most would try to hide
them from view. Trump put them proudly on display. On the few occasions he was
ever scolded into an apology — such as his notorious comments about how women
like to be grabbed by famous people — he backtracked quickly. Whatever else you
could say about Trump, he was not a phony.
That
history comes to mind this week, as Trump rescinded his previous endorsement of
the hapless Rep. Mo Brooks, who is seeking the Republican nomination for U.S.
Senate in Alabama. Brooks’ problem was that he said something that was most
likely 100 percent sincere: He believes it is time for Republicans to “put that
behind you” and move on from questioning the legitimacy of the 2020
presidential election.
Trump,
already dismayed by Brooks’ weak standing in polls, denounced him for the
decision to go “woke” and not join Trump in insisting that the 2020 election
was stolen.
The move
put an especially bright light on a trend years in the making: Trump has moved
from being the beneficiary of America’s instinctual suspicion that most
politicians are phonies who don’t really believe a thing they say, to being the
enforcer against politicians who are insufficiently phony in professing blind
devotion to him.
Brooks was
certainly being less phony in his words about the 2020 election than he was a
few days ago when braying about Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell being “a
weak-kneed, debt junkie, open-border RINO Republican.” That was a transparent
effort to get back in Trump’s favor — and it’s impossible to believe Brooks
wouldn’t be fervently pro-McConnell if he perceived that would help him. It’s
just words — he likely doesn’t give a damn.
One
suspects that Trump himself does not realize how far he has drifted from the
original source of his appeal as someone who is not connected to a reigning
power structure and may lie and even cheat but does not traffic in the usual
political B.S. Now Trump is trying to create his own power structure. And, even
if one accepts that in his self-delusion Trump really does believe the election
was somehow rigged against him, he also says lots of other things that he
self-evidently doesn’t believe.
There is little
doubt that Trump genuinely believes that the United States has no interest in
being at odds with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and no business getting enmeshed in
the Ukraine conflict. But now that Russian atrocities in Ukraine make that view
broadly unpopular, Trump does what any conventional politician would do —
pretend that his view is something else, and ludicrously assert that as
president he would be much more confrontational with Putin than the Biden
administration, including threatening the launch of nuclear weapons.
Trump makes
so much noise, and instills so much fear in Republican politicians, that it can
be hard to see the deterioration that is taking place in his political
foundation. My POLITICO colleagues Tara Palmeri and Alex Isenstadt have both
done work highlighting some cracks in that foundation, as revealed by Trump’s
clumsy efforts to play boss in his party.
Palmeri
described how competing family members, political retainers and wealthy
contributors are trying to use their access to Trump to gain endorsements for
candidates to whom they have personal ties. The implication was that Trump has
been manipulated into dubious endorsements that will expose that his ability to
swing elections for supporters or punish opponents is actually more limited
than he claims.
Isenstadt
notes that Trump has endorsed several candidates who could lose intraparty
contests. That includes Idaho Republican Janice McGeachin, who is challenging
the state’s incumbent governor, Brad Little. Trump has also lined up behind
North Carolina Republican Rep. Ted Budd, who is running in a competitive Senate
race against former Gov. Pat McCrory. In the governor’s race in Georgia, where
Trump is trying to punish incumbent Brian Kemp for not supporting his effort to
overturn the election, Kemp has so far retained a substantial polling lead and
fundraising advantage over Trump-backed former Sen. David Perdue.
It is worth
keeping these embarrassments and potential embarrassments in context. The
reality is Trump is so far dominating his party in a way that is unmatched by
any former president in the last century.
But so far
isn’t actually that far — and history has a way of catching up. In December
2020, I wrote a column noting that Trump belongs to a long line of politicians
who have used appeals similar to his to rise to prominence. At the malevolent
end this includes figures like Joseph McCarthy and George Wallace; at the
benign end it includes figures like Ross Perot. All of them struck themes
similar to the ones that vaulted Trump to power — that America is facing
decline because of the duplicity and cravenness of political elites, arguments
often laced with xenophobia. All of them for a time vaulted to prominence as
the tribune of ordinary Americans disgusted with conventional politics. All of
them tried comebacks once their period of peak power waned. None of them
succeeded. Trump is unique in that he rode his populist appeal all the way to
the presidency. He’s already surprised me with how much relevance he continues
to hold. But nothing in history suggests that he can retain this influence all
the way to 2024.
“Every hero
becomes a bore at last,” wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson — and he might have added
that they become a phony, as well.


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