Kellyanne Conway: The Cases for and Against Trump
By
Kellyanne Conway
Ms. Conway is a Republican pollster and political
consultant who was Donald J. Trump’s campaign manager in 2016 and senior
counselor to him from 2017 to 2020. She is not affiliated with his 2024
presidential campaign.
Jan. 13,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/13/opinion/donald-trump-joe-biden.html
Donald J.
Trump shocked the world in 2016 by winning the White House and becoming the
first president in U.S. history with no prior military or government
experience. He upended the fiction of electability pushed by pundits, the news
media and many political consultants, which arrogantly projects who will or
will not win long before votes are cast. He focused instead on capturing a
majority in the Electoral College, which is how a candidate does or does not
win. Not unlike Barack Obama eight years earlier, Mr. Trump exposed the limits
of Hillary Clinton’s political inevitability and personal likability, connected
directly with people, ran an outsider’s campaign taking on the establishment, and
tapped into the frustrations and aspirations of millions of Americans.
Some people
have never gotten over it. Trump Derangement Syndrome is real. There is no
vaccine and no booster for it. Cosseted in their social media bubbles and
comforted within self-selected communities suffering from sameness, the
afflicted disguise their hatred for Mr. Trump as a righteous call for justice
or a solemn love of democracy and country. So desperate is the incessant cry to
“get Trump!” that millions of otherwise pleasant and productive citizens have
become naggingly less so. They ignore the shortcomings, failings and
unpopularity of President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris and abide the
casual misstatements of an administration that says the “border is secure,” inflation
is “transitory,” “sanctions are intended to deter” Vladimir Putin from invading
Ukraine and they will “shut down the virus.” They’ve also done precious little
to learn and understand what drives the 74 million fellow Americans who were
Trump-Pence voters in 2020 and not in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
The
obsession with Mr. Trump generates all types of wishful thinking and projection
about the next election from both his critics (“He will be indicted!”) and his
supporters (“Is he still electable?”). None of that is provable, but this much
is true: Shrugging off Mr. Trump’s 2024 candidacy or writing his political
obituary is a fool’s errand — he endures persecution and eludes prosecution
like no other public figure. That could change, of course, though that cat has
nine lives.
At the same
time, it would also be foolish to assume that Mr. Trump’s path to another
presidency would be smooth and secure. This is not 2016, when he and his team
had the hunger, swagger and scrappiness of an insurgent’s campaign and the
“history be damned” happy warrior resolve of an underestimated, understaffed,
underresourced effort. It’s tough to be new twice.
Unless
what’s old can be new again. Mr. Trump’s track record reminds Republican
primary voters of better days not that long ago: accomplishments on the
economy, energy, national security, trade deals and peace deals, the drug
crisis and the southern border. He can also make a case — one that will
resonate with Republicans — about the unfairness and hypocrisy of social media
censorship and alleged big tech collusion, as recent and ongoing revelations
show. Mr. Trump, as a former president, can also be persuasive with Republican
primary voters and some independents in making a frontal attack on the Biden
administration’s feckless management of the economy, reckless spending and lack
of urgency and competence on border control and crime.
Accomplishing
this will not be easy. Mr. Trump has both political assets to carry him forward
and political baggage holding him back. For Mr. Trump to succeed, it means
fewer insults and more insights; a campaign that centers on the future, not the
past, and that channels the people’s grievances and not his own; and a
reclamation of the forgotten Americans who ushered him into the White House the
first time and who are suffering economically under Mr. Biden.
A popular
sentiment these days is, “I want the Trump policies without the Trump
personality.” It is true that limiting the name-calling frees up time and space
for persuasion and solutions. Still, it may not be possible to have one without
the other. Mr. Trump would remind people that it was a combination of his
personality and policies that forced Mexico to help secure our border;
structured new trade agreements and renewed manufacturing, mining and energy
economies; pushed to get Covid vaccines at warp speed; engaged Kim Jong-un;
played hardball with China; routed ISIS and removed Qassim Suleimani, Iran’s
most powerful military commander; forced NATO countries to increase their
defense spending and stared down Mr. Putin before he felt free to invade
Ukraine.
When it
comes to Donald J. Trump, people see what they wish to see. Much like with the
audio debate a few years ago “Do you hear ‘Laurel’ or ‘Yanny’?,” what some
perceive as an abrasive, scornful man bent on despotism, others see as a
candid, resolute leader unflinchingly committed to America’s interests.
The case
against Trump 2024 rests in some combination of fatigue with self-inflicted
sabotage, fear that he cannot outrun the mountain of legal woes, the call to
move on, a feeling that he is to blame for underwhelming Republican candidates
in 2022 and the perception that other Republicans are less to blame for 2022
and have more recent records as conservative reformers.
He also
won’t have the Republican primary field — or the debate stage — to himself. If
one person challenges Mr. Trump, it is likely five or six will jump into the
race and try to test him, too. Possible primary challengers to Mr. Trump
include governors with impressive records and huge re-election victories like
Ron DeSantis of Florida, Kim Reynolds of Iowa and Greg Abbott of Texas; those
who wish to take on Mr. Trump frontally and try to move the party past him,
like Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia and former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey;
those who can lay legitimate claim to helping realize Trump-era accomplishments
like former Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo; and others who wish to expand the party’s recent down-ballot gains in
racial and gender diversity to the presidential level, like former Gov. Nikki
Haley and Senator Tim Scott, both of South Carolina.
These are
serious and substantive men and women, all of whom would be an improvement over
Mr. Biden. For now, though, these candidates are like prospective blind dates.
Voters and donors project onto them all that they desire in a perfect
president, but until one faces the klieg lights, and is subjected to raw,
relentless, often excessive scrutiny, and unfair and inaccurate claims, there
is no way to suss out who possesses the requisite metal and mettle.
The main
talking point against Trump 2024 seems to be that Trump 2022 underperformed and
that it left him a less-feared and less-viable candidate. Mr. Trump boasts that
his general election win-loss record was 233-20 and that he hosted some 30
rallies in 17 states and more than 50 fund-raisers for candidates up for
re-election, and participated in 60 telerallies and raised nearly $350 million
in the 2022 cycle for Republican candidates and committees.
Republican
voters should be pleased that Mr. Trump and other Republican luminaries showed
up and spoke up in the midterms. Mr. Trump wasn’t the only one who campaigned
for unsuccessful candidates. Mr. DeSantis rallied in person for Kari Lake, Doug
Mastriano and Tim Michels. Mr. Pence, Ms. Haley and Mr. Pompeo endorsed Don
Bolduc, for example. Even the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, seemed
warm and hopeful about a few of the U.S. Senate candidates who came up short.
In October 2021 Mr. McConnell claimed, “Herschel [Walker] is the only one who
can unite the party, defeat Senator Warnock,” and in August 2022, “I have great
confidence. I think [Mehmet] Oz has a great shot at winning [in Pennsylvania].”
Contrast
that to Joe Biden, who was unpopular and unwelcome on the campaign trail in the
midterm elections. For seven years Mr. Trump hasn’t stopped campaigning, while
one could say that Mr. Biden, who stuck close to home for much of 2020 and did
relatively little campaigning in 2022, never truly started. It will be tough
for Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris to avoid active campaigning when their names are
on the ballot.
Any repeat
by the 2024 Trump campaign of the disastrous mistakes in personnel, strategy
and tactics of the 2020 Trump campaign may lead to the same 2020 result. With
roughly $1.6 billion to spend and Joe Biden as the opponent, the 2020 election
should have been a blowout. Instead, they proved the adage that the fastest way
to make a small fortune is to have a very large one and waste most of it.
Mr. Trump
lost support among older voters, white men, white voters with college degrees
and independents, though he increased his vote share across notable
demographics like Hispanics and Black people. One wild card: Will the hidden
2016 Trump voters, those who wish to keep their presidential pick private from
pollsters, return in 2024?
Republicans
must also invest in and be vocal about early voting. This is a competition for
ballots, not just votes. As ridiculous as it was to vote nearly two months
before Election Day and count the votes for three weeks thereafter, some of the
state-based Covid-compelled measures for voting are now permanent. If these are
the rules, adapt or die politically.
Mr. Biden,
for his part, will have his own record to run on, typical advantages of
incumbency, powerful campaign surrogates who will join him in making the
presidential race a referendum on Mr. Trump, and persistent calls for a
third-party candidate who as a spoiler could do for Mr. Biden what Ross Perot
did for Bill Clinton in 1992: deliver the presidency to the Democrat with less
than 45 percent of the popular vote.
Whether the
2024 presidential election is a cage match rematch of Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump
or a combination of other candidates remains to be seen. Each of them has defied
the odds and beat more than a dozen intraparty rivals to win their respective
primaries. Each of them now faces calls for change, questions about the
handling of classified documents and questions about age. For voters, vision
matters. Winning the presidency is hard. Only 45 men (one twice) have been
president. Hundreds have tried, many of them being told, “You can win!” even as
they lost. Success lies in having advisers who tell you what you need to know,
not just what you want to hear. And in listening to the people, who have the
final say.
Kellyanne
Conway is a Republican pollster and political consultant who was Donald J.
Trump’s campaign manager in 2016 and senior counselor to him from 2017 to 2020.
She is not affiliated with his 2024 presidential campaign.





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