The Guardian (USA)

Are Republican­s really ready to unhitch their wagon from Donald Trump?

- Tom McCarthy

Has the spell really been broken? After years of joining Donald Trump in demonizing political opponents, and holding their silence as Trump furiously shredded public trust in elections, public service, the rule of law and the truth itself, have mainstream Republican­s really decided to give him up?

Were the deaths of a police officer and four others at the US Capitol last week in a riot incited by Trump the final outrage? Or did the recent loss of two huge elections in Georgia – elections they expected to win – focus their minds?

Perhaps the impressive list of US corporatio­ns that have suspended political donations until Washington returns to sanity have been persuasive? Or the new polls showing that 74% of Americans strongly disapprove of the riot at the Capitol?

The questions arise from reports on Wednesday, initially in the New York Times, that the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, privately supports the second impeachmen­t of Trump. McConnell, whose iron grip on the Senate was torn from him suddenly by those Georgia losses, sees an urgent need for the party to purge Trump in the name of its own survival, multiple outlets reported.

“McConnell turns on Trump” is a headline that by itself signals that the Republican zeppelin is already on fire – even if it has yet to come apart in the sky.

But there are many other signals of important Republican defections from Trump. The third-ranking Republican in the House, Representa­tive Liz Cheney of Wyoming, daughter of the former vice-president Dick Cheney and no closet liberal, said on Tuesday that she would vote in favor of an impeachmen­t article charging Trump with incitement of insurrecti­on.

“There has never been a greater betrayal by a president of the United States of his office and his oath to the constituti­on,” Cheney said.

William Barr, the former attorney general and Trump apparatchi­k, voiced the same charge last week, accusing Trump of “betrayal of his office”.

More than 100 Republican party officials and sympathize­rs have signed a letter calling for Trump’s immediate resignatio­n, the conservati­ve political strategist Mike Murphy said on his podcast.

“We’re going to have a civil war now,” Murphy said, referring to the party. “The war is coming.”

Steve Schmidt, a longtime Republican strategist who left the party because of Trump, echoed that assessment.

“We’re at the moment now where we’re seeing a fracturing, a breaking, because of the unpreceden­ted situation – the sedition, the violence, the death,” Schmidt told the Associated Press.

But observers who have watched for four years as Republican­s happily harvested votes and amassed political victories under Trump – while fiercely defending the president against any whisper of criticism as Trump coerced election tampering from abroad and stoked racist hatred at home – might wonder how it is that the basic political dynamics have suddenly changed, if indeed they have.

One simple explanatio­n might follow the money. Republican­s were already facing a campaign finance crunch with the death this week of the casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, a fervent Zionist whose estimated $480m in lifetime giving to Republican causes was bookended by the takeover of the US Capitol, one week before his death, by Trump supporters in “Camp Auschwitz” T-shirts.

Another Republican megadonor and erstwhile Trump backer, Ken Langone, the billionair­e founder of Home Depot, expressed revulsion on Wednesday at the Capitol attack.

“I feel betrayed. OK?” Langone said on CNBC. “Last Wednesday, if it doesn’t break every American’s heart, something’s wrong. I didn’t sign up for that.”

Top US corporatio­ns have also signaled their displeasur­e. A list of dozens of giant companies – from American Express to Amazon, from Goldman Sachs to Bank of America to Blackrock, Google, Facebook, Marriott and Walmart – have suspended political donations in protest of the turbulence Trump has wrought, which is not taken to have been good for business.

Similarly, Trump’s lack of interest in addressing the Covid-19 pandemic, which has cost upwards of 380,000 American lives, has left most of the US economy idle and fueled unemployme­nt as countries elsewhere have gone back to work with fewer lost lives – and no culture war over facial masking.

The explanatio­n for the Republican break from Trump may come down to raw politics. As of November, Trump is a loser, who might have won re-election if only he had not alienated suburban Republican moderates in places like Atlanta, Philadelph­ia and Omaha.

Trump’s future utility on the stump, in helping Republican­s recover control of Congress in 2022 or the presidency in 2024, is questionab­le. In any case he might be deemed too unpredicta­ble to build a long-term party strategy around.

Republican­s might have noticed that Trump’s base of voters only shows up to vote for him, and not down-ballot or off-year Republican candidates.

Or Trump’s political utility might be deemed to have been used up, the politician an empty husk. In this analysis, Republican­s have already gotten everything out of Trump they wanted, and the returns at the margin look to be extremely diminishin­g.

Trump stood and smiled next to three supreme court nominees selected by outside conservati­ve groups, and Trump nominated, for hundreds of federal judgeships, whoever conservati­ves told him to. Trump was foolish enough in his own egotism to believe that the makeover of the US judiciary was something he had done. Similarly, he bragged about the tax cut bill of 2017, thinking it was something he had negotiated.

More recently, Trump has been getting in the way of McConnell’s business, and demonstrat­ing his own impotence where Congress is concerned.

In a pathetic attempt to bend the Senate leader last month, Trump vowed not to sign a Covid relief bill, demanding larger individual payouts. McConnell did not blink, and Trump backed down. Likewise, Trump’s veto of a defense spending measure was unceremoni­ously overridden by both houses of Congress.

But a Republican break with Trump is hardly complete. Trump retains huge support among the Republican rankand-file of elected officials, among state legislator­s and among Republican base voters. Even after blood was spilled in the Capitol over the election lie, 137 Republican­s in the House still voted in favor of that lie. Many Republican­s vehemently opposed Trump’s second impeachmen­t.

Dave Wasserman, the Congress editor at the Cook Political Report, noted that in the 16 hours after Cheney announced she would vote to impeach Trump, only five Republican­s had publicly said they would follow her lead.

“I’d be surprised if there are a dozen, ultimately,” Wasserman tweeted. “The GOP reality: anti-Trumpism still faces a greater risk of purge than Trumpism.”

But secret and not-so-secret motivation­s remain. At least some of the senators who will vote on whether to convict Trump in his second impeachmen­t are eager to run for president themselves in 2024 – a job made a lot easier without Trump on the field.

If, that is, he really is on his way off.

We’re seeing a fracturing, a breaking, because of the unpreceden­ted situation – the sedition, the violence, the death

Steve Schmidt

 ?? Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP ?? Republican lawmakers celebrate the passage of their tax bill at the White House with Donald Trump and Mike Pence on 20 December 2017.
Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Republican lawmakers celebrate the passage of their tax bill at the White House with Donald Trump and Mike Pence on 20 December 2017.
 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images ?? Donor Ken Langone: ‘I feel betrayed.’
Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images Donor Ken Langone: ‘I feel betrayed.’

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