OPINION
DAVID
BROOKS
Trump and DeSantis Could Both Lose
March 16,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/16/opinion/trump-desantis-lose.html
David
Brooks
By David
Brooks
Opinion
Columnist
There are
two different narratives running through the Republican Party right now. The
first is the Trumpian populist narrative we’re all familiar with: American
carnage … the elites have betrayed us … the left is destroying us … I am your
retribution.
On the
other hand, Republican governors from places like Georgia, Virginia and New
Hampshire often have a different story to tell.
They are running growing, prospering states. (Seven of the 10 fastest
growing states have Republican governors while eight of the 10 fastest
shrinking states have Democratic governors.)
So their
stories are not about the left behind; they can tell stories about the places
people are leaving for. Their most appealing narrative is: Jobs and people are
coming to us, we’ve got the better model, we’re providing businesslike
leadership to keep it going.
These
different narratives yield different political messages. The bellicose
populists put culture war issues front and center. The conservative governors
certainly play the values card, especially when schools try to usurp the role
of parents, but they are strongest when emphasizing pocketbook issues and
quality of life issues.
Gov. Brian
Kemp, for example, is making Georgia a hub for green manufacturing, attracting
immense investments in electric vehicle technologies. In his inaugural address
he vowed to make Georgia “the electric mobility capital of America.” As
Alexander Burns noted in Politico, Kemp doesn’t sell this as climate change
activism; it’s jobs and prosperity.
The two
narratives also produce radically different emotional vibes. The Donald
Trump/Tucker Carlson orbit is rife with indignation and fury. Gov. Chris Sununu
of New Hampshire, Virginia’s Glenn Youngkin and the previous Arizona governor,
Doug Ducey, are warm, upbeat people who actually enjoy their fellow human
beings.
The former
resemble the combative populism of Huey Long; the latter are more likely to
reflect the optimism of F.D.R.
If American
politics worked as it should, then the Republican primaries would be contests
between these two different narratives and governing styles — between populism
and conservatism.
But that’s
not happening so far. The first reason is that Trump’s supporters are so many
and so loyal, and his political style is so brutal, he may be deterring
governors from entering the campaign. My educated guess is that Youngkin will
not run for president in 2024; he wants to focus on Virginia. And Kemp may not,
either. Kemp has taken on Trump in the past, but who wants to get into a gutter
brawl with a front-runner when you already have a fantastic job governing the
state you love? It could be that the G.O.P. presidential field will be much
smaller than many of us thought a couple of months ago.
The second
reason we’re not seeing the two narratives face off is Ron DeSantis. The
Florida governor should be the ultimate optimistic, businesslike conservative.
His state is growing faster than any other in the country. But instead, he’s
running as a dour, humorless culture war populist — presumably because that’s
what he is.
So right
now the G.O.P. has two leading candidates with similar views, and the same
ever-present anti-woke combativeness. The race is between populist Tweedledum
and populist Tweedledee.
The
conventional wisdom is that it will stay that way — but maybe not. At this
point in earlier election cycles, Jeb Bush, Rudy Giuliani, Scott Walker and
Mike Huckabee were doing well in their polls. None became the nominee.
Furthermore,
the conservative managerial wing of the party is not some small offshoot of the
Tucker Carlson universe. In 2022, the normies did much better than the
populists. Look at Gov. Mike DeWine’s landslide win in Ohio. Millions and
millions of Republicans are voting for these people.
In Georgia
Kemp took on Trump about the Big Lie and cruised to victory. As Amy Walter of
the Cook Political Report has pointed out, Kemp had almost 90 percent approval
among his state’s Republican voters in a January poll, whereas Trump’s
favorability rating was nearly 20 points lower among those voters. Kemp’s
overall approval rating among Georgia voters was a whopping 62 percent,
including 34 percent of Democrats. Trump’s favorability rating was a pathetic
38 percent in this swing state.
The
Republican donor class is mobilizing to try to prevent a Trump nomination, and
DeSantis is overpriced.
Do we
really think a guy with a small, insular circle of advisers and limited
personal skills is going to do well in the intimate contests in Iowa and New
Hampshire? As voters focus on the economy, DeSantis massively erred in playing
culture war issues so hard.
The
conclusion I draw is that the Trump-DeSantis duopoly is unstable and represents
a wing of the party many people are getting sick of.
What does
that mean? Maybe somebody like Kemp is coaxed into running. Maybe eyes turn to
Tim Scott, an effective, optimistic senator from South Carolina. Maybe the
former governor of New Jersey Chris Christie enters the race and takes a
sledgehammer to Trump in a way that doesn’t help his own candidacy but shakes
up the status quo.
The
elemental truth is that the Republican Party is like a baseball team that has
tremendous talent in the minor leagues and a star pitcher who can’t throw
strikes or do his job. Sooner or later, there’s going to be a change.
David
Brooks has been a columnist with The Times since 2003. He is the author of “The
Road to Character” and, most recently, “The Second Mountain.” @nytdavidbrooks
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário