Sentinel & Enterprise

The Lincoln Project’s odd couples of political convenienc­e

- By Froma Harrop fharrop@gmail.com Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarro­p. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com.

The New Yorker magazine asked a typical New Yorker magazine question: “Should progressiv­es trust” The Lincoln Project?

Founded by Republican operatives who detest Donald Trump, the Project is running a swashbuckl­ing campaign to see the president defeated — and humiliated. Brilliant, funny and viciously effective, their mission is to move people who voted for Trump in 2016, or didn’t vote, to Joe Biden’s column.

Democrats don’t know how to win elections, the Project’s principals say. Democrats lack the killer instinct. Not understand­ing who really votes in this country, they mistake the far left’s hot Twitter feeds for public opinion. (The activists don’t account for a quarter of even the Democratic Party’s voter base.) Tragically, they don’t understand the nature of the Trumpian beast.

“You believed you could shame Trump and Trump voters into listening to the better angels of their nature by talking about diversity, inclusion, and liberal values,” co-founder Rick Wilson wrote in his book “Running Against the Devil.” “In reality, you were giving the Trump campaign fodder for the weaponized grievance machine that put him in office in the first place.”

What made Wilson change sides? “I grew a soul,” he said.

The Lincoln Project organizers and others in the never

Trump movement say they are the real conservati­ves. They’re appalled at Trump’s populist antics and governance so crazy it threatens national security. Their strategic goal is to give lifelong Republican­s a “permission structure” to cross over and vote for Democrats this time.

There’s something ludicrous about progressiv­es fretting over whether they can “trust” political hotshots working their butts off to send Trump packing. The Project’s managers are also out to punish down-ballot Republican­s who sacrificed their conservati­ve principles to become Trump toadies.

Yet you have two professors, Robert Saldin and Steven Teles, complainin­g in their book, “Never Trump,” that mainstream Democrats have “rehabilita­ted” the “moral status” of Republican­s who oppose the president. They say this in all earnestnes­s. By contrast, The Lincoln Project pirates are having a ball, fighting Trumpism with their “Ahoy, I’ll crush ye barnacles” gusto.

The middle of a bloody battle is a strange time to be asking soldiers fighting for your cause whether they are righteous enough to charge up the hill by your side. This is a political crisis requiring all hands on deck.

Over at the conservati­ve National Review, Steve Stampley suggested that the Project’s aim could be to “open up anti-Trump wallets on the left.” If that’s the case, it’s been doing a good job of it. But this is hardly a “grift,” as the author charged. The antiTrump forces, whether left, center or right, are getting enormous value for their money.

It’s fascinatin­g to see partisans on the right as well as the left grow uncomforta­ble at the prospect of conservati­ves and liberals agreeing on anything, even matters of national urgency. But, somehow, many can’t set aside the Hatfield vs. McCoy mentality long enough to replace a president mired in corruption, burdened by incompeten­ce and perhaps beholden to a foreign adversary.

As for The New Yorker’s question, “Should progressiv­es trust” The Lincoln Project, the answer should be “Ask again after Nov. 3.”

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