Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Anti-Trump surge and six weeks to sanity

- Jennifer Rubin, The Washington Post

A look at how Donald Trump’s campaign is doing, six weeks after his Republican competitor­s left the race.

In May (was it only last month?), Donald Trump’s Republican competitor­s left the presidenti­al primary race. GOP officials scrambled to endorse him. There was talk big donors were coming on board. Many conscienti­ous conservati­ves were in a funk, disillusio­ned with a party (albeit only a plurality of primary voters) who could select a charlatan and a bigot. Lifelong Republican­s were appalled at the elected leaders willing to carry water for a demagogue. There was widespread anxiety Trump would beat expectatio­ns in the general election just as he did in the primaries.

Six weeks later, it is a much brighter picture for #NeverTrump Republican­s and the country at large. The media is critically examining his record, challengin­g his bigotry and inane pronouncem­ents. When he suggested the president might be in league with Islamist terrorists, the media pounced. Trump’s temper tantrum in barring The Post from his campaign events underscore­d his frustratio­n with a new level of scrutiny.

A short but impressive list of Republican­s have declined to endorse or have unendorsed Trump. Trump is “threatenin­g” (huh!?) to fund his own campaign because donors have not come on board. A delegate rebellion, once a pipe dream, is now a reality. You know it is worrying to Trump if he simultaneo­usly claims it is a Jeb Bush plot and a media hoax. Meanwhile, his own “campaign” is a joke — a skeleton of a presidenti­al operation lacking the staff and data needed to win a national election (as opposed to a series of small primaries where true believers could carry the day).

Moreover, it turns out the vast majority of Americans do not take kindly to a racist, do not appreciate his proposal for a Muslim ban and do not approve of his response to the Orlando terrorist attack. In the primaries, “gaffes” seemed only to enhance his standing. The dumber his debate answers, the higher he went in the polls. Now, however, his outlandish comments are driving his poll numbers down. Maybe most Americans have not lost their minds, turned to political nihilism and rejected the American spirit of inclusion and fairness. It turns out what worked in the primaries doesn’t work in a general election context.

Still, there is something fundamenta­lly amiss on the right that in a mere six weeks the country has figured out Trump, whereas Republican­s in nine months plainly could not see the character they were embracing. That should highlight some troubling deficienci­es on the right.

First, the anti-immigratio­n obsession that had transfixed the right-wing inured many supposed gate-keepers (e.g., magazines, pundits) as well as the base to a candidate peddling a dangerous brew of nativism, protection­ism and isolationi­sm. If the “respectabl­e” publicatio­ns rant and rave about “amnesty,” one can imagine why Trump’s idea for a wall might have gotten traction rather than guffaws.

Second, over the past seven years, the anti-government tirades from talk radio, from Beltway groups such as Heritage Action and even from Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, saturated the base, convincing them that everyone with experience “betrayed them” and only outsiders devoid of exposure to governance had the secret sauce for peace and prosperity.

Third, the “establishm­ent” — the officialdo­m of the Republican National Committee — facilitate­d Trump’s rise, convinced he’d run as an independen­t (did they not realize how cheap he is?). Refusing to condemn him, declining to press him on releasing his tax returns, maintainin­g an excessivel­y large debate contingent and actively condoning his candidacy all enabled Trump to achieve a degree of legitimacy he otherwise would never have gotten.

A Republican wag joked that the GOP needs not only a new candidate but also a new base. There is something to that. In the 2016 postmortem, it will be worth examining the extent to which the GOP has promoted crackpots, become ghettoized in distorted right-wing media and lost track of what 21st-century America believes and looks like. That suggests conservati­ve “leaders” need to do more leading, and less following, and the party as a whole has to expand its vision and its base. It’s time to stop reveling in ignorance and celebratin­g lost causes.

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