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‘RINOs’ would fare better than Trump’s MAGA gang

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch.

In politics, there’s no nickname more ironic than RINO, short for “Republican in Name Only.” It basically just means “not MAGA” or “insufficie­ntly Trumpy.”

And that’s the irony, because the so-called RINOs are pretty much the only politician­s who actually care about the Republican Party.

The hopes of the GOP in retaking the U.S. Senate in November depend entirely on a handful of first-time candidates: celebrity TV doctor Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvan­ia, former football star Herschel Walker in Georgia, retired general and active crank Donald Bolduc in New Hampshire and, in Arizona, Blake Masters, a former libertaria­n minion of billionair­e Peter Thiel.

Aside from being handpicked by former President Trump, what they all have in common is not just little-to-no political experience but also shallow roots in the Republican

Party. And yet, they all vow to take on the RINOs controllin­g the

GOP, and the RINO-inChief, Sen. Mitch McConnell.

Meanwhile, Trump, a former Democrat and Reform Party presidenti­al wannabe, uses the term RINO to describe any Republican who crosses him — on anything.

But the obsession with RINOs goes beyond Trump. In a recent interview with MAGA mogul Steve Bannon, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) said that if Masters wins, he won’t vote for McConnell as leader, and that will amount to “cutting the head off the snake” by “defeating Mitch McConnell, the RINO that has controlled the Senate for years now.”

Indeed, Greene believes that was the real reason McConnell’s super PAC, the Senate Leadership Fund, was pulling nearly $10 million worth of ad buys out of Arizona: “Because Blake Masters is not the type of senator Mitch McConnell wants in Washington.”

Of course, it couldn’t be that the race is getting away from Masters, and McConnell is opting to support salvageabl­e races elsewhere, including in Ohio where J.D. Vance, another newbie, is struggling.

Trump has more cash on hand, $99 million, in his Save America PAC than the $80 million the Democratic National Committee and Republican National Committee have combined. Trump spent some money in the primaries to take out incumbent Republican­s who were insufficie­ntly loyal to him, but since then Save America has given a total of $757,000 to federal candidates and $150,000 to the Republican Party, according to Open Secrets. In August, it spent $3.9 million on Trump’s legal fees.

McConnell’s Senate Leadership Fund is spending 10 times that in Georgia alone, to drag Walker across the finish line.

In all of these Senate races, a RINO would have fared better. Arizona and New Hampshire Govs. Doug Ducey and Chris Sununu would have won in a cakewalk but balked at the idea of running amid Trump’s wreckage. Oz barely beat David McCormick in Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate primary, but McCormick would have been the better general candidate. And pretty much any Republican capable of speaking in complete sentences would surely be doing better than Walker. But Trump put his own needs ahead of the party’s.

Trump accuses McConnell of being “a pawn for the Democrats,” but Democrats benefit when Trump is in the news, which is why President Biden and the Democrats are trying to make the midterms all about Trump and “MAGA Republican­s.” It makes you wonder: Who’s the real pawn?

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