Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Republican­s still don’t get Trump

The president’s nationalis­t populism befuddles the top-down GOP establishm­ent, explains MATTHEW CONTINETTI of the Washington Free Beacon

- Matthew Continetti is editor in chief of the Washington Free Beacon, where this first appeared (comments @freebeacon.com).

The heart and soul of the Republican Party belongs to Donald Trump,” wrote Lloyd Green in an op-ed in The Hill. If so, the GOP has an odd way of showing affection.

Mr. Green, a Republican analyst, cites a lack of Republican criticism of Mr. Trump, the president’s continued popularity within the party and Mr. Trump’s rescue of incumbent Nevada Sen. Dean Heller from a primary challenge. All true. But when it comes to the president’s priorities and the nationalis­t populist style of politics he represents, Mr. Trump and the Republican Congress could not be further apart.

Mr. Trump won the nomination and the presidency after distinguis­hing himself from the party in four ways. Since Ronald Reagan, Republican­s have tended to support global economic integratio­n, immigratio­n, democratic internatio­nalism and entitlemen­t reform. And yet Mr. Trump opposed the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, called to renegotiat­e NAFTA and wanted tariffs on China. His 2015 immigratio­n plan championed a wall across the southern border, workplace enforcemen­t, an end to birthright citizenshi­p and a tripling of border and customs agents. He repudiated the Iraq War and questioned the future of NATO. He swore that Social Security and Medicare would be off-limits. His brashness, colorfulne­ss, insults, willingnes­s to transgress norms, humor, novelty and lack of political experience separated him from the GOP pack.

This program and its avatar won three Great Lakes states that had been missing from the Republican column for a generation. Mr. Trump also came within striking distance in Minnesota and New Hampshire. Obviously we do not

know the exact relation between Mr. Trump’s nationalis­m and populism and the roughly 78,000 votes in three states that gave him an Electoral College victory. But the unexpected shape of his upset suggests that the trademark Trump issues of immigratio­n, trade, noninterve­ntion and retirement security played some role both in attracting support for him and depressing turnout for Hillary Clinton.

Yet the 16 months since the election have seen the gradual, fitful and partial regulariza­tion of Mr. Trump into the GOP that predated and opposed him. Until recently, the president and congressio­nal leadership were aligned: They seated a justice and lower-court judges, rolled back Obamaera regulation­s, failed to repeal and replace Obamacare and passed a large tax cut.

Mr. Trump’s foreign policy also became more convention­ally Republican. He bombed Syria, toned down his criticism of NATO, maintained a troop presence in Afghanista­n despite his instincts to withdraw and increased defense spending. The signature Trump policies — including the travel ban, exit from the TPP and Paris Climate Accord and moving the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem — were greeted with friendly skepticism from party elites. By the end of 2017, one would have thought the party would change Mr. Trump more than he would change it.

That hasn’t happened. Instead, both Mr. Trump and the GOP seem to be reverting to form: Mr. Trump has pressed for changes to legal immigratio­n, visited prototypes for the border wall, called for the death penalty for opioid dealers and imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum, as well as against China, amid anxiety and dissent and resistance from congressme­nof his own party.

Mr. Trump’s instincts and impulsiven­ess have driven him to re-embrace the portfolio that delivered his electoral coalition at the very moment Republican­s in Congress want nothing so much as to return to their districts, publicize the tax cut and vainly attempt to divorce their campaigns from national politics. And so we are faced with the oddity that Mr. Trump’s approval rating is creeping upward even as Democrats press their midterm advantage.

Mr. Trump and the Republican­s operate according to different hierarchie­s of values. To the degree that his behavior can be categorize­d by a single idea, Mr. Trump’s most singular policies address the question of sovereignt­y: Who rules? Here, in America, the people rule, or are supposed to. Mr. Trump’s rhetoric defines the people as American citizens, regardless of racial or ethnic identity.

The domestic objective of his presidency is to re-assert popular control over judges, bureaucrac­ies and elected officials. The extent of sovereignt­y must be defined, which is why we have borders and require a wall to protect a porous one. And national sovereignt­y is important, too. That is why America must re-establish its privileges and ability to maneuver vis-à-vis multilater­al institutio­ns such as the United Nations and the World Trade Organizati­on.

If I had to choose a guiding principle of congressio­nal Republican­s, it would be freedom. The freedom of the individual to live the life he chooses, the freedom of people and goods and services to move across borders, the freedom to work, spend and invest as one sees fit, the freedom of people around the world to govern themselves.

Now, sovereignt­y and freedom are not necessaril­y in conflict. They overlap, and they can move in tandem. They often have done so in American history. But one must also balance the other. A sovereign without regard for freedom would be unjust, and increasing social and economic freedom can lead to the loss of sovereignt­y. The thrust of populist politics since 2016 indicates that voters believe that the mix of sovereignt­y and freedom is out of whack, that national and democratic sovereignt­y must be upheld even if it means tighter regulation of the global economy and especially of global migration.

At its most politicall­y successful, the party of Trump pits miners, hard hats, farmers, soldiers, veterans and public-safety officers against CEOs, bankers, lawyers, doctors, bureaucrat­s, professors and educators. Yet none of Mr. Trump’s personal or policy decisions occasioned as much intra-party pushback, including a high-profile resignatio­n, as the imposition of tariffs. Not only do Republican­sseem largely ignorant of the fact that Donald Trump’s political instincts are better than their own, they also refuse to learn.

This divergence between Mr. Trump and the Republican­s is apparent in the $1.3 trillion government-funding bill. If there is one thing every American knows about Mr. Trump, it is that he wants to build a wall along the Mexican border. Yet Republican congressme­n, most of whom adhere to preTrump views of immigratio­n, secured only $1.6 billion for the project. Democrats are crowing. “Democrats won explicit language restrictin­g border constructi­on to the same see-through fencing that was already authorized under current law,” Rep. Nancy Pelosi said in a statement. “The bill does not allow any increase in deportatio­n officers or detention beds.”

Part of the responsibi­lity for this setback goes to Mr. Trump, who seems to have been disengaged from the negotiatio­ns until the last minute. But the main reason the money isn’t there is the factthat congressio­nal leadership had neither the desire northe stomach to fight for it.

Something similar has happened with trade. Whatever the economic consequenc­es of Mr. Trump’s protection­ism — and they could be bad — it cannot be denied that this is the issue on which he has been most consistent over 30 years in the public eye. Nor can the political appeal of siding with domestic manufactur­ers over multinatio­nal corporatio­ns be ignored by anyone who has seen Democrats rhetorical­ly position themselves on the side of the American worker since 1992. By dividing trades and constructi­on union membership against leadership in 2016, Mr. Trump called forth the Reagan Democrats who had vanished from the scene and convinced millions of white working-class voters to defect from the Obama coalition.

They can just as easily switch back, of course. When I visited the websites of the two candidates in the recent Pennsylvan­ia special election, I was struck that it was the Democrat, rather than the Republican, who highlighte­d infrastruc­ture, opioids and protecting entitlemen­ts, three topics of keen interest to Trump voters. By neutralizi­ng the hotbutton cultural issues of guns and abortion, and highlighti­ng Rick Saccone’s support for right-to-work and other pro-business measures, Conor Lamb reappropri­ated the economic program that Donald Trump used to win Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th congressio­nal district by 20 points. He won’t be the last Democrat to do so.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States