‘This path is untenable’: can the Republican
party split with Trumpism?
A path forward for the GOP is unclear when the former
president still holds power over many of its lawmakers
Joan E Greve
@joanegreve
Mon 1 Feb 2021
08.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/01/republican-party-donald-trump-us-senate
Donald
Trump may have left the White House, but his shadow still looms large in
Washington and the Republican party as the Senate prepares for his second
impeachment trial.
The 50
Republicans in the Senate are grappling with how to appease Trump’s supporters,
who still make up a hefty share of the party’s base, while acknowledging that
the former president incited the 6 January attack on the US Capitol.
The
senators’ quandary underscores how Republican lawmakers remain tethered to
Trump, even after his term in office has ended, and it raises questions about in
which direction the party will move forward when so much of its base is still
loyal to a president who oversaw the loss of both chambers of Congress and the
White House.
Trump’s
continued power over Republican lawmakers was on full display last week, as 45
senators voted to pre-emptively dismiss the impeachment trial. The senators
avoided defending Trump’s behavior on 6 January, instead arguing that it was
unconstitutional to impeach a former president.
“Impeachment
is for removal from office, and the accused here has already left office,” said
Rand Paul, who led the charge to dismiss the trial. The Kentucky Republican
added that the trial would “drag our great country down into the gutter of
rancor and vitriol”.
Assuming
the 45 Republican senators who supported dismissing the trial also vote to
acquit Trump, there is no chance that the former president will be convicted
for incitement of insurrection. It would take 17 Republican senators, along
with every Senate Democrat, to convict Trump.
Tara
Setmayer, a conservative commentator who left the Republican party in November,
described the senators’ support for dismissing the trial as “the most craven
example” of Republican lawmakers’ unwillingness to stand up to Trump.
It's mind-boggling when you look at how many
opportunities the party has had to take the exit ramp and get away from
Trumpism
Tara Setmayer
“It really
is mind-boggling when you look at how many opportunities the party has had to
take the exit ramp and get away from Trumpism,” Setmayer said. “The result has
become that the Republican party now is an anti-democratic, illiberal,
pro-seditionist party.”
The problem
for Republican lawmakers who may want to split with Trump is that the former
president remains overwhelmingly popular with the party’s base. According to an
NBC News poll taken after the Capitol attack, 87% of Republicans still approve
of Trump’s performance as president. Reports that Trump has considered
launching a third party have only intensified Republicans’ fears of being
challenged from the right.
Trump’s
popularity has left Republican lawmakers with three main options: stay in the
former president’s good graces, leave office, or risk getting primaried by a
Trumpian opponent. This dynamic played out last week, as one prominent
Republican senator announced his retirement and a pro-impeachment congresswoman
faced the threat of a pro-Trump primary challenge.
Senator Rob
Portman, a Republican from Ohio, announced last Monday that he would not seek
another term, raising Democrats’ hopes of flipping his seat next year. In a
statement explaining his decision, Portman said, “We live in an increasingly
polarized country where members of both parties are being pushed further to the
right and further to the left, and that means too few people who are actively
looking to find common ground.”
Three days
after Portman’s announcement, congressman Matt Gaetz of Florida held a rally in
Wyoming to rail against Liz Cheney, one of 10 House Republicans who voted to
impeach Trump last month. Gaetz, one of Trump’s fiercest defenders in Congress,
told a crowd of about 800 in Cheyenne, “We are in a battle for the soul of the
Republican party, and I intend to win it.”
Trump
loyalists like Gaetz are counting on the idea that the president’s popularity
with the Republican base can carry them to victory, but that philosophy doesn’t
have a successful track record. Since Trump took office in 2017, Democrats have
taken control of the House, the Senate and the White House.
“Being
negative and being against the liberals might be sufficient to win a couple of
elections, but it’s not sufficient to form a governing coalition. Eventually
you have to be for something, as well as against something,” said Henry Olsen,
a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. “Right now, the
American conservative voter base is divided on what they’re for, but they’re
united on what they’re against.”
The
ideological division among conservatives was evident in December, when Trump
called for larger stimulus checks as part of a coronavirus relief package. The
legislation passed by Congress included checks of $600 for most Americans, but
the then-president said the payments should be much larger, up to $2,000.
That number
was immediately rejected by the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, who
refused to consider a House-passed bill that would approve the larger checks.
But according to polling, 72% of Trump voters agreed with the former president
that $600 checks were not sufficient.
“The
Republican party has to come to grips with where the people who are open to
voting for a conservative party are right now, and they’re actually on a host
of issues closer to where Trump is than where the pre-Trump party was,” Olsen
said.
Those
policy differences have raised the question of whether the Republican party is
on track to splinter, with one faction sticking with Trumpism and the other
focusing on traditional conservative values such as small government and
deficit reduction.
“There’s a
healthy debate about, should we just let the Republican party wither and die on
the Trumpism vine and start a new party? Because this path for the Republican
party is untenable,” Setmayer said.
In that
sense, Republican senators’ votes in the impeachment trial may provide some of
the first clues as to how the party will navigate this ideological civil war.
After all, if Trump is acquitted, he would be able to launch another White
House bid in 2024, giving Republicans the opportunity to re-nominate the former
president.
“There will
be a lot to write about over the next four years on this topic,” Olsen said.
“Impeachment will only be the beginning of this story, not anywhere close to
the end.”
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