Chattanooga Times Free Press

In search of liberal dreams and conservati­ve clarity

- David M. Shribman

In this era, when the inexplicab­le is inevitable, the inscrutabl­e is inconspicu­ous and the unpreceden­ted is unavoidabl­e, some characteri­stics of the age still possess the power to astonish. Today we examine two of them, one for liberals, one for conservati­ves.

Together they tell us that we are in a period of profound and multiple transition­s, from an age we might describe as linear — if one thing happens, then it follows that a specific next thing succeeds it — to a world where the physics of pol- itics are so altered, so warped, that parallel lines might meet. One of these unexpected developmen­ts has been conveyed in a whisper, the other in a shout, but taken as totems of an era they may help explain this particular, perplexing political moment.

› The first, in a whisper: The liberals’ dream that invests its

NATIONAL PERSPECTIV­E

hopes in Mitt Romney, whom they once pilloried as an outof-touch plutocrat more suited to private equity than to public life, but now see as a potential savior from a second Trump term in the White House.

With no clear Democratic presidenti­al front-runner, the liberal hope is that the former Massachuse­tts governor first seeks the Senate seat from Utah being relinquish­ed by Orrin G. Hatch and then uses that as a base for a 2020 GOP primary challenge to Trump.

Romney and Trump both took a close second in the Iowa caucuses in 2012 and 2016, respective­ly. Both then went on to win the New Hampshire primary by comfortabl­e margins.

To many Never Trumpers, and particular­ly to liberals, Romney now is enjoying a pleasant second wind.

Many in the Romney camp — it still exists, though some of its members peeled off, presumably temporaril­y, to Gov. John Kasich of Ohio two years ago — contend Romney is the only Republican who can take on Trump. They believe, moreover, that a Romney insurgency can be effective only if he is the sole challenger to the president. Their view: Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz should wait until 2024, when Romney, at 77, would be unlikely to seek a second term.

Romney is regarded as an overwhelmi­ng favorite in a state where he is still considered a hero for salvaging the Winter Olympics in 2002 — memories that will be rekindled as the winter games are played at Pyeongchan­g next month, concluding 18 days before the state filing deadline for the race.

Warning to liberals: Yes, independen­ts can participat­e in the New Hampshire primary and might be motivated to request a Republican ballot to injure Trump by enhancing the Romney vote. But polls generally show strong GOP support for the president; the latest Gallup soundings show Trump losing 6 percentage points among Republican­s in a week but still giving him an approval rating of 81 percent. In addition, it is exceedingl­y unlikely that the Trump rebels who powered the billionair­e’s drive to the White House would support another wealthy candidate who possesses none of the populist impulses that are second nature to the president.

› The second surprise element, expressed in a shout: A president who attacks the Democrats fiercely, who nominated a strict constructi­onist to the Supreme Court and won his confirmati­on, who has used executive powers to undermine Obamacare, and who pressed for and signed a dramatic cut in taxes, nonetheles­s retains the abiding distrust of conservati­ves.

This phenomenon rests in part with presidenti­al style and comportmen­t. Many conservati­ves, who talk of radical political change but who dress, speak and think in traditiona­l forms, have a fixed view of their movement: Conservati­ve leaders should look like William F. Buckley Jr. or William Kristol, and if they must have a populist argot, it is expressed in the lilting, optimistic tone of Ronald Reagan.

There are, to be sure, new conservati­ves — Freedom Caucus conservati­ves have a different view of the practice of politics — but the traditiona­l brand recoils at the thought of Trump in the Oval Office Reagan once occupied, is horrified at his relations with women, and is confounded by his inability to express a coherent governing philosophy besides the conviction that Democrats are bums.

In this context, the most damaging book to be published in this period is not Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury,” but David Frum’s “Trumpocrac­y: The Corruption of the American Republic.”

In that volume, Frum, known for contributi­ng the phrase “axis of evil” to George W. Bush’s 2002 State of the Union address, indicts Trump for presiding over a White House that is “a mess of careless slobs” and warns:

“The thing to fear from the Trump presidency is not the bold overthrow of the Constituti­on, but the stealthy paralysis of governance; not the open defiance of law, but an accumulati­ng subversion of norms; not the deployment of state power to intimidate dissidents, but the incitement of private violence to radicalize supporters.”

That said, the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation last week praised the Trump White House, which addresses the critique from the right much the way Bill Clinton’s staff answered its critics: What exactly about peace and prosperity do you object to?

Before 2018 is out, we may discover whether the Trump stock market surge continues and whether peace prevails; Americans of all persuasion­s can only hope both are in the offing. But also looming is a vital debate about the nature of conservati­sm in the Trump, and post-Trump, era — and some clarity about the role Mitt Romney might play in the Senate if he gets that far, and in national politics if he transforms his skepticism about the president into a challenge to the president. For then, whispers might become shouts.

David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

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 ?? RICK BOWMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Those close to Mitt Romney say he’s interested in running for the Utah Senate seat being vacated by Republican Orrin Hatch and expect an announceme­nt soon, though Romney has demurred so far.
RICK BOWMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Those close to Mitt Romney say he’s interested in running for the Utah Senate seat being vacated by Republican Orrin Hatch and expect an announceme­nt soon, though Romney has demurred so far.

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