Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP AND THE SWAMP MONSTERS

- Andrew McMeel Syndicatio­n for UFS

Alabama’s Senate race is seriously scrambling Republican politics.

Two GOP candidates will meet on Tuesday for the right to oppose Democrat Doug Jones in December. One is the incumbent Luther Strange, who was appointed to the seat vacated by Jeff Sessions when he became attorney general. Strange enjoys the strong support of Senate leader Mitch McConnell, many pro-business groups and President Trump, who has campaigned for him.

However, Strange’s opponent, former state judge Roy Moore, is campaignin­g as the One True Trumpian with the backing of religious conservati­ves and Breitbart, the alt-right news site headed by Trump’s former adviser Steve Bannon. Moore and his allies have assaulted Strange, a former Washington lobbyist for the natural gas industry, as a “swamp monster” and Capitol insider.

Democrats would have trouble beating either opponent in a deep red state like Alabama, but that’s not the point. Moore is leading in the polls, and Republican strategist­s fear that if he wins, he’ll encourage other primary challenges from the right against sitting GOP senators next year and through 2020.

“Alabama is the big enchilada,” Scott Reed, chief political strategist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, told The Washington Post.

To Reed and other charter members of the party’s governing wing, an epidemic of right-wing primary challenges would lead to disaster, and history backs them up. In recent years, Republican­s have nominated hardline purists in at least five states — Colorado, Indiana, Nevada, Delaware and Missouri — who then lost winnable Senate battles to moderate Democrats. A few more self-inflicted wounds like that and Democrats could retake the Senate.

Another possible outcome is almost as bad for the Republican leadership: more Roy Moores and fewer Luther Stranges in the Senate would seriously complicate their ability to assemble a working majority. That’s already happened in the House where 40 or so dead-enders from the Freedom Caucus have long crippled the ability of their leaders to negotiate legislativ­e compromise­s. They drove former Speaker John Boehner so crazy he quit in frustratio­n.

So where does President Trump fit in this GOP civil war? Since he is wildly impulsive and consistent­ly inconsiste­nt, the answer is far from clear. As a candidate, he was happy to attack his rivals as “swamp monsters,” and he’s openly feuded with his Congressio­nal leaders, Sen. McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan.

One whole part of his political strategy is to maintain his “outsider” status and stir up his base with repeated attacks on the Washington elites. In fact, a study by the Post shows a strong overlap in Alabama between Trump and Moore voters.

And outside of Alabama, Trump has viciously attacked Republican incumbents he considers disloyal and encouraged primary challenger­s in the Roy Moore mold to take them on next year.

So what is Trump up to? The answer reveals a tension running through the heart of the Trump presidency. In one sense he’s still part of the Hell No Caucus himself, the Swamp Drainer-in-Chief who revels in exciting his core supporters with anti-Washington rhetoric and eviscerati­ng opponents like Jeff Flake of Arizona.

But Trump is also devoted to winning, and to pass any meaningful legislatio­n he has to work with the party structure he despises — and even Democrats on occasion. The Outsider must on some level become an Insider. He needs “swamp monsters” like Mitch McConnell and Luther Strange more than they need him.

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Cokie & Steven Roberts

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