San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Republican­s torn as Trump eyes 2024 bid

- By Michael C. Bender, Reid J. Epstein and Maggie Haberman

Republican­s are bracing for Donald Trump to announce an unusually early bid for the White House, a move designed in part to shield the former president from a stream of damaging revelation­s emerging from investigat­ions into his attempts to cling to power after losing the 2020 election.

While many Republican­s would welcome Trump’s entry into the race, his move also would exacerbate persistent divisions over whether the former president is the party’s best hope to win back the White House. The party is also divided over whether his candidacy would be an unnecessar­y distractio­n from midterm elections or even a direct threat to democracy.

Trump has long hinted at a third consecutiv­e White House bid and has campaigned for much of the past year. He has accelerate­d his planning in recent weeks just as a pair of investigat­ions have intensifie­d and congressio­nal testimony has revealed new details about Trump’s indifferen­ce to the threat of violence on Jan. 6, 2021, and his refusal to act to stop an insurrecti­on.

Trump also has watched as some of his preferred candidates have lost recent primary elections, raising hopes among his potential Republican competitor­s that voters may be drifting from a politician long thought to have an iron grip on the party.

Rather than humble Trump, the developmen­ts have emboldened him to try to reassert himself as the head of the party, eclipse damaging headlines and steal attention from potential rivals, including Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, a rising favorite of donors and voters. Republican­s close to Trump have said he believes a formal announceme­nt would bolster his claims that the investigat­ions are politicall­y motivated.

Trump would enter the race as the clear frontrunne­r, with an approval rating among Republican­s around 80 percent, but there are signs that a growing number of the party’s voters are exploring other options.

“I don’t think anyone is inevitable,” said Haley Barbour, a former Republican National Committee chair who also served eight years as Mississipp­i’s governor.

‘Sure losers’

The timing of a formal announceme­nt from Trump remains uncertain. But he recently surprised some advisers by saying he might declare his candidacy on social media without warning even his own team, and aides are scrambling to build out basic campaign infrastruc­ture in time for an announceme­nt as early as this month.

That timing would be extraordin­ary — presidenti­al candidates typically announce their candidacie­s in the year before the election — and could have immediate implicatio­ns for Republican­s seeking to take control of Congress in November. Trump’s presence as an active candidate would make it easier for Democrats to turn midterm races into a referendum on the former president, who since losing in 2020 has relentless­ly spread lies about the legitimacy of the election. Some Republican­s fear that would distract from pocketbook issues that have given their party a strong advantage in congressio­nal races.

“Republican­s want to win badly in 2022, and it is dawning on many of them that relitigati­ng the 2020 election with Trump’s daily conspiracy diatribes are sure losers,” said Dick Wadhams, a Republican strategist and former chair of the Colorado Republican Party.

The former president’s team remains divided over whether he should run again. Those opposed to a third White House bid have expressed concerns ranging from doubts about Trump’s remaining political potency to questions about whether he can articulate a clear rationale for running and avoid a repeat of 2020.

Others are urging Trump to take his time. Donald Trump Jr., his eldest son, has taken a more central role in Trump’s inner circle of political advisers and has told others that he wants his father to install a more expansive campaign team around him in preparatio­n for a run.

The debate over timing comes as investigat­ions into the behavior of Trump and his associates are gathering steam. The Justice Department is looking into efforts to keep Trump in office after his defeat. Prosecutor­s in Fulton County, Ga., have convened a grand jury as part of an investigat­ion into whether the former president and his team tried to influence the vote count there. Each is separate from the House committee scrutinizi­ng his conduct in the run-up to the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Ronna McDaniel, chair of the Republican National Committee, had urged Trump to wait until after the midterms, worried that news about his campaign could derail the party’s midterm messaging. One RNC official noted that when Trump opened a campaign, the party would stop paying his legal bills related to an investigat­ion by the New York attorney general. Still, McDaniel has recently resigned herself to the idea that he will announce before the elections, according to people familiar with the conversati­ons.

But even Trump aides who are supportive of another campaign worry that the former president’s path to a third nomination has become more difficult than he is willing to acknowledg­e.

Some close to Trump have grown concerned about potential legal and political consequenc­es from the congressio­nal hearings into the Capitol riot. Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide, testified this week that Trump had known that some of his supporters were carrying weapons that day and had still encouraged his team to let them through security checkpoint­s. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., who is on the committee, said the panel had evidence of witness tampering.

Party reshaped

Trump signaled his concern about the potential political consequenc­es of the testimony, reacting in real time to the hearing by posting a dozen messages on his Truth Social website attacking Hutchinson and denying her most explosive testimony.

Few Republican officehold­ers have spoken publicly about the hearings, and most have either said nothing about the congressio­nal investigat­ion or dismissed it as a partisan sham. But there have been signs that Republican­s recognize its potential power.

“Ms. Hutchinson would be the star member of a women’s Republican club — a committed conservati­ve, no reason to say anything but the truth,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, RLa., who voted to convict in Trump’s second impeachmen­t and has been a target of Trump’s ever since. He was one of the few lawmakers who spoke on the record. “It gives power to a testimony that allows Americans to judge for themselves.”

The past two months of weekly primary contests have proved that Trump’s policies have reshaped the Republican Party. But the red-capped constituen­cy has also repeatedly demonstrat­ed its independen­ce from the patriarch of the Make America Great Again movement. While Republican primary voters backed some of Trump’s favored candidates, particular­ly in Senate primaries, they rejected his picks in Georgia, Idaho, Nebraska and elsewhere.

“There’s some evidence that some Republican voters are trying to slowwalk from Donald Trump,” said Scott Jennings, a Republican strategist. Jennings said he was not surprised by Trump’s eagerness to jump into the presidenti­al race. “If you’re in his shoes, you have to try to put that fire out. Because the more it burns, the more it burns.”

In interviews with two dozen Republican voters, party activists and elected officials, few said the Jan. 6 hearings were playing a role in their interest in other candidates. But several noted that they were looking for a nominee who was less divisive.

“There will be a number of Republican­s who many Republican­s feel cannot only unite the party but would govern with strong, conservati­ve policies,” said Jason Shepherd, a former Newt Gingrich aide who is a Georgia Republican Party state committee member. If Trump wins the nomination, Shepherd said, Republican­s will not hesitate to back him in the general election.

Other candidates

Nicole Wolter, CEO of a suburban Chicago manufactur­ing firm and a member of the board of the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers, has an office decorated with photos of her visiting the White House during Trump’s years as president.

But, Wolter said in an interview last month in her office in Wauconda, Ill., Trump has become too toxic to the voters in suburbs for Republican­s to win the general election.

“There’s just too many people who don’t really like him,” Wolter said. “We want everyone to kind of rally around him and be able to get the independen­ts, and I just think that if he ran, he wouldn’t be able to pull that off.”

Post-presidency polls have consistent­ly shown that Trump remains the most powerful figure inside his party. But potential competitor­s have not been scared off.

Last week, a survey of Republican­s in New Hampshire, an early presidenti­al primary state, showed a statistica­l tie between Trump and DeSantis.

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who told Trump last year that he wouldn’t compete against him for the presidenti­al nomination, has continued to lay the groundwork for a 2024 bid.

Pompeo has told others that he can beat Trump in the Iowa caucuses, according to people familiar with the conversati­ons.

 ?? Doug Mills/New York Times ?? Trump has come under increasing scrutiny as the House committee probing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol calls witnesses such as Cassidy Hutchinson.
Doug Mills/New York Times Trump has come under increasing scrutiny as the House committee probing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol calls witnesses such as Cassidy Hutchinson.
 ?? Rachel Mummey/New York Times ?? Former President Donald Trump is cheered on June 25 at a rally in Mendon, Ill. Republican­s are bracing for the prospect of Trump declaring an unusually early presidenti­al bid.
Rachel Mummey/New York Times Former President Donald Trump is cheered on June 25 at a rally in Mendon, Ill. Republican­s are bracing for the prospect of Trump declaring an unusually early presidenti­al bid.

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