ELECTIONS
Georgia loss piles more pressure on Trump amid
bad month
“They need to stop and regroup over the holidays,” a
former Trump campaign adviser said, amid investigations and midterm losses.
Behind, the scenes, Trump lieutenants moved to deflect
blame for Herschel Walker’s loss, attributing his defeat to a cascade of
Democratic spending.
By ALEX
ISENSTADT
12/07/2022
07:12 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/07/trump-world-georgia-2024-00072924
Former
President Donald Trump had hoped to jumpstart his 2024 comeback bid buoyed by a
team of newly elected MAGA allies.
Instead,
Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker on Tuesday became the latest
high-profile Trump-endorsed candidate to go down to defeat — joining a long
list including Pennsylvania’s Mehmet Oz, Arizona’s Kari Lake and Blake Masters,
Wisconsin’s Tim Michels and Nevada’s Adam Laxalt.
The losses
have raised new questions about Trump’s political strength and capped off what
those close to him concede was a nightmarish month, one that has left the
former president badly wounded just as he is embarking on a new campaign. Trump
lieutenants have been forced to reckon with everything from the ex-president’s
much-criticized dinner with the antisemitic rapper formerly known as Kanye West
and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, to a campaign launch that was widely panned
as low-energy, to a widening net of legal investigations on subjects including
his conduct before and during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and his handling of
confidential documents.
Some in
Trump’s orbit called for a reset on Wednesday, a day after Democratic Sen.
Raphael Warnock defeated Walker — a longtime Trump friend and ally for whom the
former president personally campaigned and raised money after recruiting him
into the Senate race.
“I think at
this point in his nascent reelection campaign, they need to stop and regroup
over the holidays,” said David Urban, a former senior Trump campaign adviser.
“Since the announcement for his reelect, I don’t think that by any measurable
standard you can say it’s been going well. You’ve had unforced error after
unforced error.”
Trump
advisers pushed back Wednesday on the growing chorus of criticism, arguing that
the campaign was still in its early stages and that they were taking a
deliberative approach — including building out political teams in early-voting
primary states — that would put the former president in a good position to win
the Republican nomination once again. Trump has so far been relying on a lean
operation, though the ranks of operatives are expected to grow in the months to
come.
“Our
strategy is by design. 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,” said Steven Cheung, a Trump campaign spokesperson. “We are not going
to play into the media’s game where they are trying to dictate how he
campaigns.”
Still,
there are mounting questions about whether the GOP is looking to move on — from
suburban voters in Georgia to the party’s well-heeled donor set. Prior to
Walker’s loss, private equity executive Stephen Schwarzman, who gave $3 million
to a pro-Trump super PAC during the 2020 campaign, had said he will not back
the former president in 2024. Miriam Adelson, who with her late husband, casino
mogul Sheldon Adelson, gave $90 million to a Trump-aligned super PAC, has been
telling people privately that she won’t get involved in the 2024 GOP primary.
Trump is
also confronting a group of would-be rivals who are showing little deference,
instead moving to capitalize on his political setbacks. Virginia Gov. Glenn
Youngkin delivered an implicit criticism of Trump on Tuesday just hours before
polls closed in Georgia, arguing during an appearance before the Wall Street
Journal’s CEO Council that “when we start looking back to 2020 we’re looking
backwards, and it’s time for us to … look forward.”
The
“Republican Party has to be a party of addition, not subtraction,” Youngkin
also said during the event.
Behind, the
scenes, Trump lieutenants moved to deflect blame for Walker’s loss, attributing
his defeat to a cascade of Democratic spending that drowned out the Republican
candidate. And while the former football star had been Trump’s handpicked
candidate, they noted that the former president had played little role in the
month-long runoff, not even visiting the state to campaign for him.
Indeed,
Trump allies argued that had the former president been more active in the race,
voters aligned him would have been more motivated to turn out for Walker.
Some in
Trump’s camp expressed criticism of the GOP’s decision to thrust Georgia Gov.
Brian Kemp into the forefront of the race. Trump backed an unsuccessful
challenge against Kemp in this year’s primary after Kemp refused to aid his
efforts to subvert the results of the 2020 election. While Trump stayed out of
the state during the runoff, Kemp hit the trail with Walker and lent his voter
turnout apparatus to the national party.
“Weak
establishment Republicans continue to scheme and work against the America First
agenda, even if it means jeopardizing a Senate seat because they refused to
fight alongside President Trump and the movement,” Cheung said.
But just
how much to involve Trump in the Senate race had been a complicated question
for the Walker team.
The former
president lost Georgia in 2020 and has had a tortured relationship with Kemp,
the just-reelected Republican governor whom Trump unsuccessfully tried to
defeat in this year’s primary.
Those close
to Walker said the Trump team had been understanding of the predicament, and
they made clear they were willing to do — or not do — whatever Walker’s
campaign wanted. While Trump ended up helping out with fundraising and doing a
pre-runoff tele-townhall with Walker, he did not venture north from neighboring
Florida to campaign with the Georgia candidate.
With the
midterm election now over, Urban argued, it had become clear that voters had
rendered a harsh judgment on Trump’s fixation on the 2020 election. Trump, he
argued, needed to offer voters a message that’s “optimistic and forward
looking.”
“Time will
tell,” Urban said, “whether the president can do that or not.”
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