Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The also-ran debate

- NOLAN FINLEY THE DETROIT NEWS

For a couple of hours Wednesday night, it was nice to pretend the Republican Party is ready to engage in a competitiv­e primary season that step-by-step winnows a reasonably impressive field of candidates to a single standard-bearer who can put an end to the Joe Biden presidency.

The first Republican debate was a good show, energetic, passionate and a true brawl over the issues that will motivate voters to the polls in 2024.

For nearly an hour, Donald Trump’s name was barely mentioned. It was nearly possible to forget about the former president and indulge the fantasy that one of these Republican­s might emerge as the GOP nominee.

But nothing happened on the debate stage in Milwaukee to change the reality that the GOP race is still all about Trump.

Since there was a debate, the temptation to treat it as if it mattered is irresistib­le. And who knows, there’s a possibilit­y Republican voters will come to the realizatio­n that, as former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said, “Trump is the most disliked politician in America. We can’t win a general election that way.”

Haley, Trump’s former UN ambassador, was the night’s clear winner. She was forceful, informed and in command. On the scale of presidenti­al gravitas, Haley scored the highest among the eight debaters.

At the bottom was young entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy, 38, who has been surging in the polls on the strength of vapid sound bites that touch on every conservati­ve talking point.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie nailed Ramaswamy, whose positions were as skinny as his suit, as the “ChatGPT candidate”—a perfect descriptio­n. He was as annoying as a gnat, and thus the other candidates spent much of the night swatting at him. The attention didn’t help him.

Ramaswamy delivered the most bizarre line of the night in calling Trump “the greatest president of the 21st Century.” If he feels that way, why is he running against him instead of working for his campaign?

On Trump, the candidates were inexcusabl­y timid except for Christie and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, both of whom were unequivoca­l in calling out the former president’s moral and ethical shortcomin­gs. (Trump, meanwhile, was on X saying of Jan. 6, “People in that crowd said it was the most beautiful day they experience­d,” and lending credibilit­y to the idea of a coming civil war.)

Democrats will assure abortion is the motivating issue in 2024, and again Haley came out on top on that issue, speaking to the constituen­cy Republican­s need to win back: women. She advocated a compromise that would ban late-term abortions but allow states to keep the procedure legal.

The biggest loser: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who did nothing to reverse his slide. He’s got a great record in Florida, but presented as shrill and perpetuall­y angry.

Again, this very likely is a moot exercise. I’d be shocked if today’s polls show Trump lost ground for not being in Milwaukee.

But it was therapeuti­c to live briefly in a make-believe world in which the Republican Party had moved beyond Trump.

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