There is no Republican Party anymore! I don’t k
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I don’t know if we have arrived at a moment in which conservative elites have stopped giving Trump the full benefit of the doubt, but we are nonetheless seeing a number lining up against him – and not just the usual folks, like former Wyoming Congresswoman Liz Cheney. This month, former Vice President Mike Pence said he would not endorse Trump. He based that decision on explicitly conservative grounds.
No vice president has ever said his old running mate is undeserving of his support. His decision, moreover, follows a slew of former Trump administration officials who have openly criticized him or stayed mum. According to the Post’s Aaron Blake, only a third of his former cabinet members are aligned with him. Fewer have endorsed him. Some, like former Defense Secretary Mark Esper, have called him a security risk. Blake wrote that others are conspicuous by their absence, including Mick Mulvaney, Alex Azar, Betsy DeVos, Elaine Chao, Jeff Sessions and Rick Perry. Every single one is a dyed-in-the-wool conservative.
If Pence is any indication, the breaking point may be Trump’s attempt to overthrow the democratic will of the American people at the J6 insurrection. That was among the former vice president’s reasons. Trump had wanted him to reject swing-state electoral votes and send them back to legislatures controlled by the GOP. Pence denied he had that power, so Trump sent in a phalanx of paramilitaries to pressure him into doing as ordered. “Hang Mike Pence,” they chanted. Mulvaney, Azar, DeVos and Chao all resigned in protest after the insurrection.
Conservative elites might hold their noses and support Trump if he chose to move on from the insurrection, but he won’t. He’s doubling down. His first rally after officially securing the Republican nomination was in Dayton, Ohio, last Saturday. According to the AP, Trump “stood onstage, his hand raised in salute to the brim of his red MAGA hat, as a recorded chorus of prisoners in jail for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack sang the national anthem. An announcer asked the crowd to please rise ‘for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6th hostages.’ And people did, and sang along. ‘They were unbelievable patriots,’ Trump said as the recording ended. Having previously vowed to pardon the rioters, he promised to help them ‘the first day we get into office.’”
The J6 insurrection is now a “cornerstone” of Trump’s campaign.
Violence, the threat of violence and his failed coup are the context for properly understanding comments Trump made at that rally. Here’s ABC World News Tonight host Mary Bruce: “We begin tonight with the race for the White House and former President Donald Trump’s campaign now on the defensive after his fiery rhetoric at a rally in Dayton, Ohio, on Saturday night. Trump warn[ed], while discussing the economy, that there would be a quote ‘bloodbath’ if he’s not reelected in November. This after the former president kicked off the event by paying tribute to those who attacked the US Capitol on January 6.”
Conservative elites might tolerate even that if they believed they could control Trump. But whatever hope there was in doing that almost certainly melted into the air after his takeover of the Republican Party’s official fundraising arm, the Republican National Committee. Lara Trump is in charge, virtually guaranteeing that donations will be sent to her father-in-law, not to struggling down-ballot Republicans.
Donald Trump and the party are now completely melded. There’s no daylight between them. If he goes down, they all go down. That might be reason enough, if nothing else, for conservative elites to begin distancing themselves now. Pence and others could be anticipating a moment, post-election, when there’s a huge power vacuum to fill in.
(Paul Ryan, the former Republican speaker of the House, was probably the last elite conservative to exert control over Trump when he convinced him, by stroking his immense ego, to sign off on a tax cut for the rich that ballooned the national debt by orders of magnitude. Now a private citizen, Ryan has also come out strongly against Trump.)
In the absence of control by conservative elites, Trump’s weakness is increasingly on display. He has made anti-democratic violence a centerpiece of his White House bid. He has rejected solutions to issues he’s running on. (He blames Joe Biden for his “open border policy” but killed a bipartisan bill, via the House speaker, that would have built a border wall.)