Is Trump finally politically dead? Sort of
Robert
Reich
Republican lawmakers know Trump is unpopular – but
some feverishly pro-Trump voters have the party in a bind
Sun 18 Dec
2022 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/dec/18/trump-politically-dead-sort-of
As Congress
ends its first post-Trump term, the biggest political question hanging over
America is: when will the Republican party finally reach its anti-Trump tipping
point – when a majority of Republican lawmakers disavow him?
Again and
again, it looks like the tipping point is near but the party remains under
Trump’s thumb.
What about
last month’s dinner at Mar-a-Lago, with Ye - formerly Kanye West - the man
whose fame as a musician has been dwarfed by his antisemitic declarations,
along with infamous Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes?
It didn’t
come near to tipping the scales.
What about
Trump’s 3 December declaration that the “massive fraud” of the 2020 election
would allow for the constitution to be “terminated”?
Nope.
Both events
caused grumbling among a few Republican lawmakers, but most avoided criticizing
Trump (as they’ve avoided in the past and as they avoided doing the moment the
furor over January 6 had died down) for fear of his wrath.
But what’s
to fear now? Didn’t the midterms reveal how weak he is?
After all,
most of the candidates he endorsed flamed out, including celebrity doctor
Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania; Tim Michels in Wisconsin; Adam Laxalt in Nevada;
Blake Masters and Kari Lake in Arizona; and Herschel Walker in Georgia.
(Walker’s campaign even asked Trump to stay away in the final weeks.)
Many
election deniers hit the skids. Michigan’s legislature swung to the Democrats
for the first time since the 1980s.
Democrats
defied almost all doomsday prophecies as well as the historic pattern of
sitting presidents’ parties losing midterms. Why? In large part because so many
voters fear and loathe the former president.
Nearly as
many viewed the midterms as a referendum on Trump as who saw it as a referendum
on Joe Biden. As Mitch McConnell explained, swing voters “were frightened” by
the Trump-induced Republican rhetoric, “so they pulled back”.
And it’s
only going to get worse for Trump.
His
business has been found guilty of criminal fraud. Investigators have found more
classified documents in a storage unit near Mar-a-Lago. A criminal case is
pending in Georgia. The January 6 committee is likely to make a criminal
referral to the justice department, whose special counsel is already building a
criminal case against him. Several leaders of the January 6 attack have already
been convicted of seditious conspiracy.
Even the
kingpins of the Republican party, including the rightwing media tycoon Rupert
Murdoch, have switched their allegiances away – to Ron DeSantis or Ted Cruz or
another Republican hopeful.
So why
hasn’t the party as a whole tipped? Why aren’t almost all Republican lawmakers
publicly disavowing the former sociopath-in-chief?
Two words:
the base.
Utah’s
Republican senator Mitt Romney, no friend of Trump, put it bluntly last week:
I think
we’ve got, I don’t know, 12 people or more that would like to be president,
that are thinking of running in 2024. If President Trump continues in his
campaign, I’m not sure any one of them can make it through and beat him. He’s
got such a strong base of, I don’t know, 30% or 40% of the Republican voters,
or maybe more, it’s going to be hard to knock him off as our nominee.
That’s the
problem in a nutshell, folks.
It’s not so
much the size of Trump’s base. Even 40% of Republican voters is a relatively
small group nationwide, especially considering that fewer than 30% of all
voters are registered Republicans.
It’s the
intensity and tenacity of their support, which gives them effective control
over the Republican party. They won’t budge.
Until they
budge, most Republican lawmakers won’t budge either. (With Romney and Liz
Cheney being notable exceptions, and we know what happened to her.)
The problem
isn’t some highfalutin moral issue, such as Republican lawmakers putting their
party over their country. It’s more prosaic. They want to keep their jobs.
The only
hope for the Republican party is that Trump is opposed in the 2024 presidential
primaries by just one opponent – most obviously Florida’s Ron DeSantis – who
becomes the alternative for the majority of Republican voters who don’t
particularly want Trump to be their standard bearer.
But if
DeSantis were to jump in, it’s likely so would a bunch of others – Mike Pence,
Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz, et al (Romney’s “12 or more”) – who’d split the
non-Trump Republicans, allowing Trump’s base to anoint him the Republican
nominee.
Which means
the Republican party will continue to rot as a political party, as a governing
institution and as a moral entity. This may be good for Democrats in 2024, but in
the larger sense it’s bad for us all.
Robert
Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the
University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Saving Capitalism: For
the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged
It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is
at robertreich.substack.com
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