Liz Cheney is the leader of the anti-Trump
Republican resistance – where does it go now?
The January 6 co-chair has been anointed the valiant
leader of the Never Trump movement. But does that make her a general without an
army?
David Smith
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Sat 20 Aug
2022 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/20/liz-cheney-never-trump-republicans-2024
She knew
the price of defying Donald Trump but did it anyway. Liz Cheney, crushed in a
primary election in Wyoming, was anointed by supporters and commentators as
leader of the Republican resistance to the former US president.
But that
invited a question: what resistance? Admirers of the three-term congresswoman
who lost her House seat to a Trump-backed challenger warn that she could now
find herself a general without an army.
In her
concession speech in Jackson, Wyoming, on Tuesday, Cheney pointed out that if
she had been willing to parrot Trump’s election lies, she would have remained
in Congress. Instead she voted to impeach him and, as vice-chair of the January
6 committee, eviscerated him on primetime TV.
Now, having
transferred leftover campaign funds into a new entity, The Great Task, and
hinted at a presidential run, she seems determined to embrace her status as the
face of the Never Trump movement.
“She set
herself up to be that, to be the force that is going to stand up and fight
because very few people have come forward and taken such a powerful stance,”
said Monika McDermott, a political science professor at Fordham University in
New York.
“It helps
that she lost so she’s able to do that. That’s what she’s hoping to be.”
The Great
Task, however, may be an understatement of the challenge ahead. Trump’s
Republican critics did appear to have the wind at their backs just couple of
months ago as his poll ratings sank, he was pummeled by the January 6 committee
and candidates he endorsed lost primaries in Georgia and elsewhere.
But the
76-year-old managed to turn an FBI search for government secrets at his home in
Florida into a public relations triumph with his base. Donations poured in and
Republicans rallied. Even potential 2024 rivals such as Ron DeSantis, the
governor of Florida, felt obliged to question the justice department’s motives.
Meanwhile,
Trump-favoured candidates surged in states such as Arizona, Wisconsin and
Wyoming. Of the 10 House Republicans, including Cheney, who voted to impeach
Trump for inciting the January 6 insurrection, only two remain up for
re-election.
McDermott
said: “It seemed like he was fading from the public eye and a lot of people,
especially Republicans, were glad about that. But his base is being riled up
again. The FBI search was one source of that. The primary wins have been
another.
“He has
bounced back. He’s rebounded quite a bit from where he was post-presidency. At
this point he is the titular head of the Republican party, whether people want
him to be or not.”
Frank
Luntz, a pollster who has advised many Republican campaigns, agreed that the
primary wins are significant. He said: “Trump’s probably stronger with the GOP
right now because of the Mar-a-Lago raid than in any time in the last six
months.
“He’s
turned himself into a victim and that unites Republicans around him. So they
[the US justice department] better have something, because he has a new life
within the GOP.”
‘Whatever it takes’
Anti-Trump
forces remain scattered. Some Republican senators, such as Mitt Romney of Utah,
and governors, such as Larry Hogan of Maryland, remain willing to speak out.
Disaffected conservatives have set up ventures such as the Lincoln Project,
Principles First, the Republican Accountability Project and the Bulwark
website.
Adam
Kinzinger, Cheney’s sole Republican colleague on the January 6 committee,
created a group called Country First to recruit and back anti-Trump candidates.
But Kinzinger himself is retiring.
With her
storied name – her father, Dick Cheney, was vice-president under George W Bush
– Cheney could emerge as the de facto resistance leader, touring the country
and TV studios, prosecuting the case against Trump as an existential threat to
democracy. Her work on the January 6 committee will continue until she
relinquishes her seat in January. More televised hearings are promised.
On
Wednesday she told NBC: “I will be doing whatever it takes to keep Donald Trump
out of the Oval Office.”
She added
that running for president “is something I’m thinking about and I’ll make a
decision in the coming months”.
It would be
tough. Cheney would have almost no chance of winning a primary and could expect
the Republican National Committee to look for reasons to keep her off the
debate stage. Few know the pitfalls better than Joe Walsh, a former congressman
from Illinois who took on Trump in 2020.
Walsh said:
“There is no anti-Trump movement in the Republican party. I love Liz and she’s
a hero for what she did and God bless her but, as I realised two years ago,
there’s no room in that party for me. There’s no room in this party for her.
She knows that. She’s got a bigger name so she’ll leverage it but she’s got no
army to lead.”
So where do
anti-Trump Republicans go from here?
“What Liz
Cheney is going to find is this is a difficult road because, if you play this
road out all the way, you have to do what I do, which is temporarily be on Team
Democrat, which is weird for a Tea Party guy like me.
“I know Liz
believes the Republican party right now is a threat to our democracy. If you
believe that then you have to support people who will defeat Republicans and
right now the only people who will defeat Republicans are Democrats. I think
Liz is getting close to that point.”
Walsh
admitted that being on “Team Democrat” is still a strange sensation.
“It’s
fucking bizarre. Once a week, I pinch myself and think, ‘How the hell did I get
here?’ I mean, I’m out there trying to help Tim Ryan win in Ohio but this is
where we are because my former party has become what they’ve become.
“I don’t
know what Liz will do. Again, she’s a different animal because she’s a Cheney
and she can stay in that party and raise hell, but to what end? It can’t be
changed.”
‘A big mistake’
If Trump is
the Republican nominee, Cheney could stand as an independent in a general
election. But that would run the “spoiler” risk of peeling off anti-Trump
Republicans from the Democrat, presumably Joe Biden, and inadvertently giving
Trump a path to the White House.
Luntz
predicted: “She actually would take away more Biden votes than Trump votes.”
Cheney has
won the admiration of Democrats and independents but some observers detect
hubris. In her concession speech, she raised eyebrows by drawing parallels with
Abraham Lincoln, the president who steered the union through the civil war.
Cheney
said: “The great and original champion of our party, Abraham Lincoln, was
defeated in elections for the Senate and the House before he won the most important
election of all. Lincoln ultimately prevailed, he saved our union, and he
defined our obligation as Americans for all of history.”
Luntz said:
“Some Republicans who admire her tenacity and her convictions became annoyed
that she compared herself to Abraham Lincoln. That was a big mistake. Whoever
wrote that line really should be fired because instead of it being about Trump
it became about her. And that did her irreparable damage.”
The Cheneys
have been players in Washington for half a century, from the time Dick Cheney
first ran for Congress to the arrival of Liz Cheney in 2017. She rose to the
same position as her father, No 3 Republican in the House, only to be ousted as
punishment for her dissent.
Then, on
Tuesday, after the highest turnout of any Republican primary in Wyoming’s
132-year history, Cheney lost to the conservative lawyer Harriet Hageman by 36
points. Trump acolytes gloated that it signified the final purge of the
Bush-Cheney era, surpassed by his populist brand of “America first” and
baseless conspiracy theories. The Never Trumpers were in retreat once more.
Larry
Jacobs, director of the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the
University of Minnesota, said: “Liz Cheney certainly won the hearts of many
Democrats and independents but her power in the Republican party doesn’t hold a
candle to Donald Trump.
“We have to
just be honest about that. She’s not a real threat to Donald Trump. She sees
herself as kind of saviour but it’s in a party that’s not really looking for a
saviour.”

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