Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHAT WILL TEXAS TELL US?

- Steven Roberts

Michael Wood will tell us something about today’s Republican Party.

A major in the Marine Corps Reserves, he’s one of 23 candidates from both parties running in a special election on May 1 in the sixth district of Texas. (The election will fill the seat of the late Rep. Ron Wright, who died from COVID-19 earlier this year.)

But of those 23 candidates, Wood is the only Republican who opposes Donald Trump.

“The Republican Party has lost its way and now is the time to fight for its renewal,” Wood says on his website. “We were once a party of ideas, but we have devolved into a cult of personalit­y. This must end, and Texas must lead the way.”

That’s a message many Republican­s embrace privately, but are too frightened of Trump’s tantrums to express in public. The question is whether Wood can do well enough to encourage other GOPers to free the party from the ex-president’s chokehold.

“It’s a fascinatin­g test case,” Matt Gorman, a Republican strategist, told ABC. “It could provide a blueprint for folks and organizati­ons who would want to do this sort of thing in districts across the country.”

Frankly, the prospects are not great. In the latest Politico/Morning Consult poll, 81% of Republican­s and party leaners view Trump favorably. Susan Wright, widow of the previous congressma­n, is also running for the seat. She has received Trump’s endorsemen­t and remains the favorite.

Republican leaders have been making the pilgrimage to Trump’s shrine at Mar-a-Lago and pledging their devotion. The ex-president has amassed a huge war chest of about $85 million, much of it from small donors, and state parties from North Carolina to Nevada have censured Republican officials who stood up to Trump and rejected his lies about the election.

Perhaps the best example of Trump’s continuing influence — backed by his limitless capacity for grudge-holding and revenge-seeking — is Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and ambassador to the United Nations who hungers to run for president.

In an interview with Politico in February, she said of Trump, “We need to acknowledg­e he let us down. He went down a path he shouldn’t have, and we shouldn’t have followed him, and we shouldn’t have listened to him. And we can’t let that ever happen again.” Just recently, however, she’s scuttled backward, saying she wouldn’t challenge Trump if he ran in 2024 — and would, in fact, endorse him.

But a Trump-led party could be headed for disaster. In the latest average of national polls by Real Clear Politics, the former president’s favorable rating is 39.3%. He received 46.9% of the vote last November, so this represents a fall-off of 7.6% since that high point.

Ed Rogers, a veteran GOP insider, told Tom Edsall of The New York Times: “I don’t think Trump can win a two-person race in a general election. He can’t get a majority. He pulled a rabbit out of the hat in 2016, and he got beat bad by an uninspirin­g candidate in 2020. 2024 is a long way away, but I don’t know what might happen to make Trump have broader appeal or more advantages than he did in 2020.”

Trump could also hurt down-ballot candidates, which is why many smart thinkers believe upstarts like Wood represent the brightest future for the Republican Party.

Denver Riggleman, a former GOP congressma­n from Virginia who lost a primary to a Trump acolyte, warns his party to reject the temptation­s of Trumpism. He argues that there’s “a strong contingent of GOP voters who have completely lost themselves in the rabbit hole of conspiraci­es, disinforma­tion and grievance politics,” reports CNN.

Dissidents like Wood and Riggleman refuse to shut up and go away. But it’s not clear yet who’s listening to them.

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