Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Republican­s must now cut all ties with Trump

- By Scott Jennings is a longtime Republican advisor, former special assistant to President George W. Bush and CNN political commentato­r. He is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. @ScottJenni­ngsKY

President Trump violated his oath of office this week. He swore to protect and defend the Constituti­on. Instead, he fomented an insurrecti­on against Congress and has taken no responsibi­lity for it nor shown any contrition.

He is not fit to hold office at this point, and certainly should not be supported in the future.

The president has f loated a third run for the White House and, before last week’s siege of the Capitol, would have entered the 2024 primary as the prohibitiv­e favorite. It seemed as if he would leave office with a lock on the Republican Party, despite losing the election.

But Trump has forfeited any claim he once had to continue holding any position of national responsibi­lity. The Republican Party — my party — can no longer tolerate someone operating so clearly outside the bounds of democratic norms. And he must be kept from running in 2024. We now have clear evidence from two straight national elections that Trump cannot even win a plurality of the votes. And that was before Wednesday’s national disgrace.

Setting aside the insurrecti­on, Trump has dramatical­ly weakened his party since November, costing Republican­s the Senate majority (a loss that reportedly delighted him). Trump’s phone call to Georgia’s top election official, begging for a “recalculat­ion” of the votes cast in his race, was an abject disaster, as was his message to his supporters that their votes might not count. It turned out some of them were listening, just as they were at the rally on Wednesday morning, when he urged them to march to the Capitol.

It didn’t have to end like this for Trump. George W. Bush lost the popular vote in 2000, but then governed in a way that delivered a majority vote four years later. His was the template Trump should have followed: Prove your critics wrong — especially the ones who treated you as illegitima­te — by surprising them on policy and politics. Reach out to all Americans, not just your supporters. And sometimes zig when they expect you to zag.

But Trump went backward, losing by 3 million votes in 2016 and then by 7 million in 2020. He could have cleaned up leftover messes from previous administra­tions, cutting a new path through the wilderness of Washington’s bipartisan failures.

Trump largely failed to do that. He did score some victories on criminal justice reform, gaining traction on the issue in a way that left his critics wondering whether the president’s unorthodox style might be what the country needed to break the partisan impasse. But he turned out not to have the attention span for forging other policy wins, including in areas that would have endeared him to moderate suburbanit­es who were wary of him in 2016, weary of him by 2018, and worn out by him in 2020.

Trump, who had billed himself as the ultimate deal maker, failed again and again to make deals that would have helped his reelection. At one point, he had congressio­nal Democrats talked into $25 billion for his border wall in an agreement that would have also taken care of the “Dreamer” population. But he just couldn’t close the deal.

Playing solely to his base lost Trump the election, alienating former Republican­s in the suburbs who might have overlooked his character flaws had he given them more to chew on than uncouth behavior and conspiracy theories. The Georgia Senate runoffs showed again that the Republican Party under Trump has developed major problems with traditiona­l center-right voters, even as it has picked up some support among other demographi­cs. To win in the future, the party must find leaders who can (and will) appeal to both constituen­cies.

Trump’s failure to understand the possibilit­ies of his own policy inf luence — and the political rewards to be reaped from it — sank his presidency. Perhaps he thought that by cutting deals to appeal to America’s center he would lose his base. In retrospect, though, that was terrible judgment. They would have followed Trump anywhere, as we’ve seen in his disastrous quest to overturn the election results.

Every conversati­on about his term — and his obituary — will begin and end with the insurrecti­on he fomented against the U.S. Congress because of his unwillingn­ess to accept the results of a free and fair election.

Republican­s cannot nominate Trump again in 2024, for both political and national security reasons. To nominate him again would divorce the party from the wide political spectrum that has defined the United States since its founding. Trump’s legacy could have been something positive despite his losing the election; that’s all wiped away now.

Republican­s must cut all ties with Trump. We didn’t want him to leave office in a blaze of disgrace; he chose that path himself. We accepted him as our party leader and our president, and many worked faithfully to shape his administra­tion in a positive way. But he clearly doesn’t want us anymore, and we should oblige this final request.

Several people stood tall on Wednesday, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (RKy.) and Vice President Mike Pence, who rejected Trump’s demands to disregard the Constituti­on. Those are the true Republican­s and patriots who did the right thing.

But many did not, including GOP Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Ted Cruz of Texas and Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama, who were effectivel­y Trump’s deputies in fomenting an attack on the Capitol. Even after the mob was cleared, they and a few others plowed ahead with their illegitima­te electoral objections, disqualify­ing themselves from pursuing the presidency or other positions of leadership going forward. They threw in with those who occupied the U.S. Capitol wearing animal pelts and horns. Utterly disgracefu­l.

The party has interestin­g voices on the horizon, including Sens. Tim Scott of South Carolina and Tom Cotton of Arkansas. They and others can lead as we move on from Trump, banishing him to the political wilderness for violating his oath and staining the office of the president with his actions. Perhaps now we can return to a GOP anchored on principles instead of personalit­ies, with leaders who serve for the good of the nation instead of their own personal self-aggrandize­ment.

Scott Jennings

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