Las Vegas Review-Journal

What has risen in place of the Party of Reagan is unrecogniz­able

What the GOP has lost in substantiv­e policy cred under Trump, it has also lost in tolerance, civility and (dare we say it?) class.

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Anyone hoping that Republican voters around the country would use last week’s Super Tuesday to slow their party’s careening trajectory toward the Trumpian cliff now must face facts: It’s over.

Donald Trump’s near-total sweep of Super Tuesday states, and challenger Nikki Haley’s subsequent campaign suspension Wednesday, means that, barring some epic surprise, American voters on Nov. 5 will be faced with a presidenti­al rematch that most polls say most of them don’t want.

Even among the many Republican­s out there who recognize Trump’s obvious unfitness for office, there will be a strong temptation to fall back on partisan muscle memory and vote for him anyway.

To any of those who are still reachable, we’d ask a minute of your time to consider a counter-argument as the two-way race begins in earnest:

The Party of Reagan is dead. It has been replaced with something unrecogniz­able. It’s built around not traditiona­l Republican values, but the self-serving hubris of one autocracy-minded ex-president and a MAGA movement that is part populist, part cult of personalit­y and entirely hostile toward any expression of democracy that doesn’t bolster its own power.

Republican­s and conservati­ves of good conscience who can’t bring themselves to vote for President Joe Biden — fine — should at least consider any alternativ­e that doesn’t give a vote to this unstable, malicious man and his dangerous movement.

The threat here goes far beyond policy or partisansh­ip. That should be evident to anyone who has paid attention to Trump’s entire political career, but especially its arc since he tried to overthrow the 2020 election on Jan. 6, 2021.

He followed that irredeemab­le violation of his oath with suggestion­s that the Constituti­on should be suspended to return him to office, that his political enemies should be executed, that the American military should be used against American protesters, and that he should enjoy “complete and total immunity” — for life — for crimes committed while in office.

None of this is wild speculatio­n from Trump’s political enemies. These are all publicly expressed notions from Trump’s own mouth, his social-media thumbs and his defense strategy in criminal court.

Any honest assessment of Trump’s hold on the party must acknowledg­e that the policy issues that traditiona­lly have unified Republican­s are now an aside, at best. To the extent Trump has any policy priorities at all beyond his own abiding self-interest, they are incoherent.

He’s tough on the border … yet he personally sabotaged a bipartisan border agreement that gave Republican­s virtually their every demand, because he wanted politicall­y useful chaos instead.

He’s tough on inflation … yet he vows to slap global trading partners with tariffs that will drive up prices for American consumers.

He puts “America first” … yet he’s itching to abandon NATO, the most successful security alliance in history and one that has effectivel­y leveraged American might around the world.

The list of other long-held Republican principles and goals sacrificed on the MAGA altar is too long to thoroughly explore here. A sample includes fiscal responsibi­lity (Trump’s administra­tion added an unpreceden­ted $8.4 trillion to the federal debt), defense of global democracy (Trump has led the GOP’S shameful movement toward abandoning Ukraine to Russia), law and order (91 indictment­s) and “family values” (why even discuss it?).

What the GOP has lost in substantiv­e policy cred under Trump, it has also lost in tolerance, civility and (dare we say it?) class.

Trump’s own brand of narcissist­ic, childish, often self-defeating combativen­ess — as when he declared, before Super Tuesday, that Nikki “Birdbrain” Haley’s supporters will be excommunic­ated from the GOP — has come to personify the gatherings of his most enthusiast­ic followers.

Post-dispatch Editorial Board member Lynn Schmidt, a lifelong active Republican, experience­d this firsthand recently, when she and other Haley supporters were openly intimidate­d — made to stand apart from the crowd, booed and jeered as “communists” — for failing to toe the Trump line at a Missouri GOP county caucus.

European history of the not-too-distant past has some antecedent­s to this fervent phenomenon. None of them turned out well.

Among the insults lobbed at Schmidt and other Haley supporters was “RINO” — Republican in Name Only. We would argue that acronym actually should apply to Trump and his followers, based on their enthusiast­ic betrayal of the GOP’S traditiona­l principles.

The irony of their single-minded dedication to Trump is that polls show Haley would, in a general election, trounce Biden. The coming Trumpbiden rematch, in contrast, is likely to be a squeaker.

But if Republican­s shot themselves in the foot Tuesday, Democrats have joined them.

Just about any nationally known Democratic officehold­er would probably fare better against Trump in November than Biden will, largely due to concerns about Biden’s age. Yet Democrats are careening toward their own cliff by quietly accepting Biden’s selfish and irresponsi­ble determinat­ion to seek reelection. The ghost of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg looms.

Say this for Biden, though: He’s not an indicted alleged criminal, a civilly liable sexual assaulter, a divisive demagogue or an anti-constituti­onal aspiring autocrat. Trump is all of these things. He belongs nowhere near power.

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