NEWS
ANALYSIS
Donald Trump and His Terrible, Horrible, No Good,
Very Bad 3 Weeks
For the former president, who raced to announce his
third run for the White House in hopes of clearing the Republican field, the
losses, legal setbacks and embarrassments are rapidly piling up.
Maggie
HabermanMichael C. Bender
By Maggie
Haberman and Michael C. Bender
Dec. 7,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/07/us/politics/donald-trump-republicans-turmoil.html
Donald J.
Trump’s unusually early announcement of a third presidential campaign was aimed
in part at clearing the Republican field for 2024, but his first three weeks as
a candidate have undercut that goal, highlighting his vulnerabilities and
giving considerable ammunition to those in the G.O.P. arguing to turn the page
on him.
Since
emerging from the November election with a string of humiliating losses to show
for his pretensions to be a midterm kingmaker, Mr. Trump has entertained a
leading white supremacist and a celebrity antisemite at his South Florida
mansion.
He has
suggested terminating the Constitution — the one that a president swears to
preserve, protect and defend — in furtherance of his long-running lie that the
2020 election was stolen from him.
His
business was just convicted on all 17 counts in a tax-fraud case in New York
City.
And his
handpicked candidate for the Senate in Georgia — Herschel Walker, the football
star Mr. Trump employed in a brief stint as a pro football team owner in the
1980s — went down to defeat Tuesday night after a campaign that will be
remembered as a string of scandals and self-inflicted wounds.
Extending
his streak of self-sabotage, Mr. Trump himself spent Tuesday night entertaining
yet another fringe character, posing for thumbs-up photos at his club with an
adherent of the QAnon and “Pizzagate” conspiracy theories, ABC News reported.
For Mr. Trump,
the losses and embarrassments are rapidly piling up, aggravating longstanding
concerns among his fellow Republicans that his 2016 victory may have been an
aberration — and that his persistence with a comeback attempt could sink the
party’s hopes of reclaiming the White House in 2024.
“I know a
lot of people in our party love the former president,” Senator Mitt Romney said
on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, responding to Mr. Walker’s defeat. “But he’s, if
you will, the kiss of death for somebody who wants to win a general election.
And at some point, we’ve got to move on and look for new leaders that will lead
us to win.”
Scott Reed,
a veteran Republican strategist and former top adviser to the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, called the last three weeks “devastating for Trump’s future
viability.”
“His rushed
announcement, serious legal setbacks and the defeat of his handpicked Senate
candidates — which once again cost the G.O.P. control of the Senate — have
raised serious concerns with his donors and supporters,” Mr. Reed said.
“Abandonment,”
he added, “has begun.”
It is too
soon to weigh the long-term effects on Mr. Trump’s latest candidacy of the
current run of defeats and denunciations, especially given his long track
record of weathering controversies.
His rise
reflected, and accelerated, the ascendancy of the right wing of the Republican
Party, and with a solid one-fourth or more of the G.O.P. still solidly in his
corner, he remains a clear favorite in polls of potential Republican
contenders. But it is not clear that Mr. Trump will be able to replicate his appeal
to the much broader coalition that delivered him an unexpected victory in 2016.
It has been
an inauspicious beginning for Mr. Trump, who has now led Republicans to defeat
or disappointment in three straight election cycles.
Ignoring
most of his advisers, Mr. Trump chose to announce his campaign a week after the
midterm election, counting on a strong result for Republicans. Instead, the
G.O.P. barely captured the House and failed to take the Senate, prompting many
in the party to assign blame to Mr. Trump, for endorsing flawed candidates and
pressuring them to embrace his lies about the 2020 election.
“If we
would have taken the Senate, and the House by a good majority instead of a slim
margin, then that would have paved the way for Trump to get the nomination and
wrap it up quickly,” said Lori Klein Corbin, an Arizona member of the
Republican National Committee. “Now, we just don’t know.”
Mr. Trump
has held no campaign events since he got into the race, has yet to name people
to key campaign posts and has not established a campaign headquarters. He has
largely kept to Mar-a-Lago, participating remotely in just a few public events,
like a rally by telephone for Mr. Walker in Georgia.
Yet Mr.
Trump found time to dine on Nov. 22 with Kanye West, the rap artist whose
approval Mr. Trump had repeatedly sought as president, and who had been widely
denounced for a series of antisemitic comments, and with the white supremacist
Nick Fuentes, a notorious racist and Holocaust denier. (And when his former
ambassador to Israel, David M. Friedman, was among those to chastise him, Mr.
Trump responded by privately complaining that Mr. Friedman had shown
disloyalty.)
In a
statement, Steven Cheung, a senior communications adviser to Mr. Trump,
dismissed questions about the start of the campaign, calling Mr. Trump “the
single, most dominant force in politics” and insisting that all was going
according to plan.
“We’re
focused on building out the operation and putting in place a foundation to wage
an overwhelming campaign that’s never been seen before,” Mr. Cheung said.
“We’re building out teams in early voting states and making sure we are
positioned to win on all levels.”
Mr. Trump’s
losing streak includes serious legal setbacks.
His
four-year effort to block congressional Democrats from obtaining his tax
returns ended in defeat at the Supreme Court, and the House Ways and Means
Committee said on Nov. 30 that it had obtained access to six years of his
returns. A federal appeals court on Dec. 1 shut down a lawsuit by Mr. Trump
that had, for nearly three months, slowed the inquiry into whether he illegally
kept national security records at Mar-a-Lago.
Then, in
New York on Tuesday, a jury returned guilty verdicts against Mr. Trump’s family
business on all 17 counts related to a tax-fraud scheme, detailing what
prosecutors called a “culture of fraud and deception” at the company that bears
his name.
Mr.
Walker’s defeat Tuesday night in his runoff with Senator Raphael Warnock, a
Democrat, came as a final blow capping Mr. Trump’s miserable year as a
political mastermind.
Mr. Trump
had pressed Mr. Walker to run and endorsed him early on, disregarding Republicans
in Washington who urged caution before anointing Mr. Walker given the
allegations of domestic violence in his past. Mr. Trump was adamant that Mr.
Walker would prevail, just as Mr. Trump himself had weathered his own scandals.
But while
Mr. Walker kept the race surprisingly close, given the crush of headlines about
the previously undisclosed children he had fathered and abortions he had
reportedly urged romantic partners to get, he lost by nearly 100,000 votes —
and Democrats gained an invaluable 51st seat in the Senate.
Julianne
Thompson, a Republican consultant in Atlanta and former spokeswoman for the
state G.O.P., said the overall midterm results in Georgia — where voters
rejected Trump-endorsed candidates for Senate, governor, secretary of state and
attorney general — showed that “a lot of people are questioning the direction
of the party.”
“There is a
big part of the Republican Party that is ready to move on,” she said.
More
broadly, Mr. Trump’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad three weeks appear
to have called into question whether his seeming imperviousness to the normal
rules of political gravity may have worn off at long last.
“People see
what’s been happening, and will interpret that as weakness and as an
opportunity to challenge President Trump,” said Michael Barnett, the Republican
chairman in Palm Beach County, Fla. “I don’t think his influence has dropped
that much — if at all — but he’s going to have opponents.”
Emily Cochrane contributed reporting.
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