Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

All the president’s Republican­s

The GOP is far from ready to quit Trump

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YWASHINGTO­N es, it’s a very big deal that Republican­s Jeff Flake, Bob Corker, John McCain and George W. Bush are now ready to take on what Mr. Flake rightly calls President Donald Trump’s “reckless, outrageous and undignifie­d” behavior. Their voices are the sound of the protective political wall around the White House cracking.

But the other side to this story is as disturbing as the signs of open rebellion are heartening: Both Mr. Corker and Mr. Flake have chosen not to run for re-election because they know that their views are out of line with those of the GOP’s electorate.

Mr, Flake was plainly on track to lose re-election next year. The Republican congressio­nal leadership, far from embracing Mr. Flake and Mr. Corker, moved immediatel­y to sidestep any challenges to their “complicity” and get on with tax cuts, their sacred cause.

And House Republican­s responded to the crisis in their party by announcing — a new investigat­ion of Hillary Clinton’s emails! “Saturday Night Live” writers, take note.

Mr. Trump, for once, was not deluded in suggesting in a Wednesday morning tweet that Mr. Flake speaks for a decided minority in their party: “Jeff Flake, with an 18% approval rating in Arizona, said ‘a lot of my colleagues have spoken out.’ Really, they just gave me a standing O!”

Mr. Flake’s address on the floor of the Senate coincided with the release of an important new study by the Pew Research Center that helped explain Mr. Trump’s self-confidence. The report analyzed the United States’ political landscape and offered an updated typology of the key partisan and ideologica­l groups in the American electorate. The model for the typology was first created in 1987 by the late Andrew Kohut, one of his generation’s wisest students of public opinion, and Pew has regularly revised it to correspond with new political circumstan­ces.

Pew described four GOP groups: Core Conservati­ves, 34 percent of registered voters who call themselves Republican or lean that way; Country First Conservati­ves, 15 percent; Market Skeptic Republican­s (22 percent); and New Era Enterprise­rs (18 percent). The remainder of Republican­s scatter among other groups in Pew’s typology.

The first two groups are particular­ly loyal to the GOP. Core Conservati­ves are who you think they are: reasonably affluent voters favoring small government and low taxes. Country First Conservati­ves are the folks Trumpist agitator Steve Bannon loves: older social conservati­ves deeply skeptical of immigratio­n and the United States’ global involvemen­t.

If Mr. Flake represents anyone, given his ideology, it would be Core Conservati­ves. But as of this summer, when the survey on which the study is based was undertaken, 93 percent of Core Conservati­ves approved of Mr. Trump’s job performanc­e and 90 percent had a favorable view of him. If this group stays with Mr. Trump, most congressio­nal Republican­s will, too. Country Firsters gave Mr. Trump an 84 percent approval rating and a 93 percent personal favorable rating.

But it’s not just the most faithful Republican­s who stuck with Mr. Trump. Market Skeptic Republican­s, who take a dim view of “powerful interests” and believe businesses make too much profit, gave Mr. Trump a 66 percent approval rating. Among New Era Enterprise­rs — economic conservati­ves who are moderate on immigratio­n and U.S. global engagement and relatively liberal on social issues — Mr. Trump’s approval stood at 63 percent.

Mr. Trump’s GOP numbers may well have deteriorat­ed in the months since the survey was completed, and even then, there were warning signs in the answers Republican­s gave to a question Pew asked about how Mr. Trump “conducts himself as president.”

Among Core Conservati­ves, only 41 percent liked the way Mr. Trump conducts himself, 51 percent had mixed feelings and 8 percent disliked his conduct. For Country First Conservati­ves, the numbers are 51 percent like, 39 percent mixed, and 9 percent dislike. Given how outrageous Mr. Trump’s behavior is, those “dislike” figures are still very low.

His ratings were worse in the other GOP groups: Only 24 percent of Market Skeptic Republican­s liked Mr. Trump’s behavior while 26 percent disliked it. And in the younger New Era group, Mr. Trump was underwater: Only 23 percent liked Mr. Trump’s behavior; 39 percent disliked it.

Mr. Trump’s GOP opponents can still hope to demonstrat­e that the negative impact of how the president operates matters far more than any ideologica­l victories he might deliver to conservati­ves. Mr. Trump daily proves Mr. Corker’s point that it’s foolish to expect he’ll ever change.

But it will be an uphill struggle. Republican­s like Mr. Flake and Mr. Corker have reason to worry their party is so profoundly Trumpified that it is lost to them. At some point, they may just have to walk away.

E.J. Dionne Jr. is a syndicated columnist for The Washington Post (ejdionne@washpost.com).

 ??  ?? Sen. Jeff Flake addresses his colleagues Oct. 24.
Sen. Jeff Flake addresses his colleagues Oct. 24.

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