Trump’s act is ‘old and tired’, says his own
former national security adviser
John Bolton is latest ex-White House official to
condemn former boss and says Republicans are ready for a ‘fresh face’
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Sat 26 Nov
2022 10.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/nov/26/donald-trump-old-and-tired-john-bolton
John
Bolton, former national security adviser to Donald Trump, has described the
former US president’s act as “old and tired” and said the Republican party is
ready to move on to a “fresh face”.
Bolton is
the latest ex-White House official to condemn Trump after Republicans
underperformed in this month’s midterm elections, which added to a losing
streak that convinced some he is now hurting rather than helping the party.
“There are
a lot of reasons to be against Trump being the nominee but the one I’m hearing
now as I call around the country, talking to my supporters and others about
what happened on 8 November, is the number of people who have just switched
Trump off in their brain,” Bolton told the Guardian.
“Even if
they loved his style, loved his approach, loved his policies, loved everything
about him, they don’t want to lose and the fear is, given the results on 8
November, that if he got the nomination, not only would he lose the general
election, but he would take an awful lot of Republican candidates down with
him.”
Now 74,
Bolton served as US ambassador to the UN under President George W Bush in
2005-06 and was a staunch advocate of the Iraq war. He became Trump’s national
security adviser in 2018 only to be fired the following year, then wrote a
scathing memoir that declared the president incompetent and unfit for office.
He now
joins Trump’s vice-president Mike Pence, secretary of state Mike Pompeo,
attorney general William Barr, UN ambassador Nikki Haley, chief of staff Mick
Mulvaney and onetime ally Chris Christie in a growing rebellion among alumni
making the case – overtly or subtly – that Trump has become an electoral
liability.
They point
out that Republicans lost the House of Representatives in 2018, the presidency
and Senate in 2020 and the Senate again in 2022, while gaining a
smaller-than-expected majority in the House. Paul Ryan, the most recent
Republican speaker of the House, blamed the Trump factor, telling ABC News’s
This Week with George Stephanopoulos: “I think it’s palpable right now. We get
past Trump, we start winning elections. We stick with Trump, we keep losing
elections.”
Last week
Trump announced his third consecutive run for the White House only for his
headaches to be compounded when the attorney general, Merrick Garland, named a
special counsel to lead the federal investigations into his attempts to
overturn his 2020 election defeat and removal of classified documents from the
White House.
Yet the
76-year-old former president still commands a chunk of fervent and significant
support in the Republican base. His power and influence were evident in
Republican primary elections where many of his anointed candidates prevailed
over establishment figures such as Congresswoman Liz Cheney of Wyoming.
Bolton
acknowledged: “There’s no doubt Trump’s endorsement in the primary can be very
valuable to a candidate in the Republican party. But relying on that
endorsement or trumpeting yourself as the Trump-endorsed candidate is poisonous
in the general election. So if you actually want to win elections, Trump is not
the answer.
“William F
Buckley [the conservative author] once had a rule that in Republican primaries
he supported the most conservative candidate capable of winning the general
election and, under that theory, Trump loses.”
Bolton said
he has conducted his own polling that shows Trump’s base within the party has
been declining slowly but steadily for two years.
He said:
“One question we asked was: do you want Trump or do you want a fresh face? I
think in our last poll over 50% said they wanted a fresh face. That’s only
going to continue. I personally don’t think Biden is going to end up running on
the Democratic side and that’ll have an impact as well.”
Pence,
Pompeo and Christie are among potential challengers to Trump for the 2024
nomination but the early frontrunner is Ron DeSantis, who delivered a “red
wave” to Florida when he was easily re-elected as governor. DeSantis is a
former navy lawyer who served at the base in Guantánamo Bay and in Iraq.
His foreign
policy positions are likely to sit well with Bolton and other foreign policy
hawks. DeSantis has condemned Biden’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan,
expressed opposition to the Iran nuclear deal and taken a hard line on China,
Cuba and Venezuela. In 2019 he reminded his followers that he had “promised to
be the most pro-Israel governor in America”.
Bolton said
he first met DeSantis before the latter first ran for Congress in 2012. He
noted that DeSantis’s roommate in Iraq was Adam Laxalt, who worked for Bolton
in the Bush state department and narrowly lost an election for the Senate in
Nevada earlier this month.
DeSantis
has “had a very successful run as governor of Florida”, he said. “He won re-election
on 8 November with a big majority. A lot of people look to him as the next
generation candidate. That’s one of Trump’s biggest problems – his act is old
and tired now.”
But Bolton,
who has his own Pac and Super Pac to raise funds for Republicans, insisted he
was not yet throwing his weight behind any 2024 contenders. “I would certainly
be available and happy to talk to any of the candidates that wanted to talk
about foreign policy and happy to help me make them all be better prepared to
be the nominee.”
The next
primary could also expose and exacerbate a foreign policy split in the
Republican party between an interventionist wing, personified by Bolton and Liz
Cheney, and “America first” isolationism embodied by Trump and Congresswoman
Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has called for a halt to funding Ukraine’s fight
against Russia.
Bolton,
founder of the Foundation for American Security and Freedom, commented: “Within
the party as a whole, support for the Ukrainian government and people are
overwhelming. I do plan to spend some time in the next two years working
against what I would call the virus of isolationism within the Republican party
to make sure it does not become a serious force.”
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