Magazine
POLITICS
Opinion | What Happens if the GOP Tries to Leave
Trump Behind
Trump would surely sabotage the GOP rather than accept
losing the 2024 nomination.
Opinion by
JEFF GREENFIELD
06/24/2022
04:30 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/06/24/desantis-trump-2024-00041790
Jeff
Greenfield is a five-time Emmy-winning network television analyst and author.
It’s not
exactly a thunderous roar, more like a stage whisper, running through the ranks
of what we used to think of as mainstream Republicans: “Maybe he doesn’t have
to be our nominee in 2024.”
They grasp,
if not at straws, then at green shoots springing up in one place after another.
In Georgia, virtually all of Donald Trump’s favorites lost their nomination
fights. A new poll out of New Hampshire shows Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis running
a couple of points ahead of Trump among GOP voters; last October, by
comparison, Trump had a 25-point margin. The revelations from the Jan. 6
Committee, while apparently changing few Republican minds, has painted a
picture of presidential misconduct so blatant that nearly six in 10 Americans
believe he should be charged with criminal conduct. (Pro Tip: A presidential
candidate under criminal indictment is in a suboptimal situation). More and
more Republicans, while not confronting Trump directly, speak in Aesopian terms
about not fighting past battles, about looking to the future, about nominating
someone with vaguely humanoid hair (OK, not that last one just yet).
But if
Republicans are thinking optimistically about a 2024 campaign without Trump as
their nominee, they are also in the grip of an illusion — one which
demonstrates a striking lack of understanding about who Trump is.
Here’s the
illusion: Trump runs again, but GOP voters are persuaded it is time to turn the
page; then, after a series of losses in states ranging from New Hampshire to
Georgia to Florida, Trump realizes that there is no mathematical way for him to
win the nomination, and throws his support to the apparent nominee, pledging to
do all he can to ensure a Republican victory.
OK, now
let’s return to planet Earth.
It is the
fundamental belief — or tropism — of Trump that he is incapable of losing an
election honestly. The loss itself is proof of fraud, and even a potential loss
is grounds for rejecting the results. In one of the first debates of 2016, he
was the only Republican candidate who would not pledge to back the party’s
ultimate nominee. When he lost the Iowa caucuses to Ted Cruz, he tweeted:
“Based on the fraud committed by Senator Ted Cruz during the Iowa Caucus,
either a new election should take place or Cruz results nullified.” He claimed
he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton in 2016 because of the “millions”
of aliens who voted illegally.
“I think
there was tremendous cheating in California,” he told Fox News host Laura Ingraham.
“There was tremendous cheating in New York and other places.” Since Election
Night in 2020, he has claimed to have won “by a landslide” in every contested
state. (This instinct is not confined to the political world. Trump claims he
was cheated out of an Emmy when he hosted “The Apprentice” and constantly
asserts that the 58-story Trump Tower is really 68 stories high).
Given this
core character trait, what do you suppose will happen if Trump faces a serious
competitor for the nomination in 2024? Is he likely to accept the vote count
that shows him losing a primary or caucus? Is it likely he will forego the
temptation to challenge every convention rule that poses a threat to him? (If
you want to see what a genuinely contested GOP convention looks like, check out
the Taft-Roosevelt fight in 1912, or the Eisenhower-Taft confrontation of
1952.)
Most
important, a Trump who is denied the nomination — which, by his account, must
have been the product of horrible, disgusting cheating the likes of which nobody
has ever seen — is a Trump with the inclination and the resources to run an
independent campaign for president. And he’ll have enough true believers to
doom whoever the GOP nominee is.
In his
famous 1860 Cooper Union speech, Abe Lincoln condemned Southern Democrats for
threatening secession by charging: “you will destroy the Government, unless you
be allowed to construe and enforce the Constitution as you please. … You will
rule or ruin in all events.”
For Trump,
“rule or ruin” may sound less like a critique than a campaign pledge. And the
same Republican Party that has been content to dismiss the mountain of evidence
about his character and fitness for office may find itself in two years facing
the very credible threat of blackmail. In enjoying the political benefits of
Trump’s appeal, they have sowed the wind. In two years, they may reap
the whirlwind.
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