Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pundit says Trump likely to run again

- BY ANDY SHER Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

NASHVILLE— Pundit, activist and Donald Trump critic Bill Kristol is laying odds that the former president will run again in 2024.

“I assume he’s going to run,” said Kristol, editor-atlarge of The Bulwark website and onetime chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle during President George H.W. Bush’s administra­tion.

“He wants to be president again,” Kristol said. “He’s clearly chafing down there in Mar-a-Lago. And he’s not going to sit there and enjoy watching a whole bunch of other people running for president. He can try to be kingmaker, but it’s not quite the same … as being the candidate and 20,000 cheering you.”

Kristol’s comments came Monday evening during an event sponsored by the Tennessee Democracy Forum and held at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a. It was hosted by David Eichenthal, a forum board member who was active in Democratic politics before moving to Tennessee, where he worked for then-Mayor Bob Corker of Chattanoog­a, a Republican later elected to the U.S. Senate.

On Thursday, Trump is scheduled to be in Nashville, where he is expected to give the keynote speech at a conference hosted by the Faith and Freedom Coalition at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center.

Monday’s event with Kristol followed the second hearing of a U.S. House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters as congressme­n and senators were certifying results of the 2020 presidenti­al election in which Democrat Joe Biden defeated Trump.

“I really just thought [Trump] was totally unqualifie­d to be president, both in terms of background and experience, but more importantl­y, character and judgment and a willingnes­s to be a demagogue,” Kristol told Eichenthal.

“Demagoguer­y is a very dangerous thing,” added Kristol, who founded The Weekly Standard, a conservati­ve magazine, and earlier worked for then-U.S. Education Secretary William Bennett during President Ronald Reagan’s administra­tion. “You know, the willingnes­s to stir up passions and incite people. Everyone does it a little if you’re in politics. It’s a gray area, you might say, with a little bit of political leadership and a little bit of exciting people, having a kind of a straw man you criticize.

“I do think Trump has made everything much, much worse. We had already a lot of resentment­s, a lot of issues, the financial crisis, people from the center of the country feel like they’re being neglected,” Kristol said. “Then you have a politician who purposely stirs that up. We’ve had demagogues many times over our history — usually senators, governors, troublemak­ers restricted to particular parts of the country.

“But still,” Kristol added, “not a president for four years, a candidate for a year and a half, purposely poking every sore spot.”

Eichenthal asked Kristol about movement in

“I do think Trump has made everything much, much worse.”

— BILL KRISTOL

the U.S. Senate on a bipartisan gun safety deal in response to the latest outbreak of mass shootings across the country. Senators announced a framework Sunday that offers some modest curbs on guns while boosting support to improve school safety and mental health programs. Eichenthal said some will be disappoint­ed it doesn’t go far enough.

“But the ability of a group of Democrats and Republican­s to actually get something in terms of legislatio­n on this issue, do you see that as sort of a positive sign with regard to partisansh­ip and leadership?” he said.

“I do,” Kristol replied. “I mean, it’s minor, you might say, and on a lot of other issues, they’re not getting agreements on. But I think it’s important, and when I talk to people on the Hill, I always try to say that even if it’s kind of on the merits, you’re not getting nearly as much as you want. It’s not going to solve, I wouldn’t say, even most of the problem. Still, the very fact of having such a deal is itself a positive. Given our politics, it’s a very good signal to send to the state and local politician­s.”

Kristol also noted there might be a deal in the works on the Electoral Count Act, which he said “would be a fix to some degree, not perfectly, the guardrails that Trump was trying to maneuver around.”

Trump and his allies allegedly sought to pressure top leaders in a number of Republican-led states won by Biden to change the vote tallies. Among those who felt pressured was Georgia Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, who refused. Trump later backed U.S. Rep. Jody Hice’s GOP primary challenge to Raffensper­ger, but Raffensper­ger won.

U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, told CBS News of proposed legislatio­n that would make clear that the vice president’s role is ministeria­l in the process of counting Electoral College votes. And the proposed measure would raise the threshold for triggering a challenge to a state’s slate from one member in each chamber to 20% of the members in each body. There would be a majority vote required to sustain an objection.

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Bill Kristol

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