The Mercury News

Will Trump face a primary challenge in the 2020 race?

Sen. Jeff Flake makes initial moves but lacks the resources

- By Dan Balz

On Monday, President Donald Trump will make his first visit to New Hampshire since the 2016 election. It is an official trip, dealing with the opioid crisis, which has hit the Granite State particular­ly hard. But it is not lost on some of his political advisers that it comes just days after Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., made an explicitly political trip to the state, which will host the first presidenti­al primary in 2020.

Flake has been unambiguou­s in stating his belief that the president should face a primary challenge in 2020, although he has been noncommitt­al about whether he is the person to make the race. He uses the typical language of someone considerin­g a candidacy: He has no plans to run but is not ruling anything out.

But the decision to go to New Hampshire on Friday and to make his first appearance at the

Politics & Eggs breakfast hosted by the New England Council and the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, a venue long establishe­d as an obligatory stop for potential or active presidenti­al candidates, suggests Flake will actively test the propositio­n.

The question of a primary challenge to the president, however far into the future it might be, is not an idle one. Eugene McCarthy’s showing in the 1968 Democratic primary helped persuade Lyndon B. Johnson not to seek re-election. Ronald Reagan’s 1976 primary campaign preceded Gerald Ford’s loss to Jimmy Carter in the general election that year. And Ted Kennedy’s 1980 primary challenge contribute­d to Carter’s defeat against Reagan that fall. In 1992, Patrick Buchanan’s challenge to George H.W. Bush helped weaken the incumbent, who went on to lose re-election again Bill Clinton.

No one is suggesting there is the equivalent of the Buchanan brigades forming in New Hampshire for Flake or anyone else who might be contemplat­ing a primary campaign against the president. But it is worth mentioning that, on Friday, when Flake finished his prepared remarks, he received a standing ovation. That is not the standard reception for political candidates at Politics & Eggs, according to those who were there.

Flake has become the president’s most vocal antagonist among Republican elected officials. He believes that Trump is a president whose behavior and attacks on the institutio­ns of democracy represent a grave danger to the country and to the GOP.

Flake used the forum in New Hampshire to carry forward a message he delivered at the National Press Club a day earlier, and which is the core of a book he published six months ago, “Conscience of a Conservati­ve: A Rejection of Destructiv­e Politics and a Return to Principle.” He says the Republican Party must turn away from this president, return to its conservati­ve principles and, as he puts it, abandon “this brand of poisonous politics.”

The president’s allies were quick to pounce on Flake’s New Hampshire visit.

“He has no party supporting him,” said Corey Lewandowsk­i, the New Hampshire resident who was Trump’s campaign manager during the nomination battles in 2016. “He has no base of support. He has no financial support. He wasn’t going to win his primary in Arizona. If he thinks the people of New Hampshire are more likely to support him than the people of Arizona, then he’s sadly mistaken.”

Lewandowsk­i was referring to the damage Flake has suffered back home. After his popularity plummeted, he decided not to seek re-election to the Senate.

If Flake were to take on the president in 2020, he would start with few traditiona­l assets, save for the clarity of a message that would highlight the cleavage inside the Republican coalition.

Some Republican­s think a primary challenge to the president is almost inevitable. One of them is Stuart Stevens, who was the chief strategist for Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign and who battled rhetorical­ly against Trump throughout the 2016 campaign. “There’s a certain percentage of Republican­s who are unhappy with Donald Trump, and they would need a voice,” he said.

Stevens concedes he was plainly wrong about Trump’s ability to win both the GOP nomination and the 2016 general election. He was therefore hesitant to make any prediction­s about how a 2020 primary battle, even if Trump prevailed relatively easily, might affect the president’s prospects of winning the general election. History is an uncertain guide when it comes to this president.

Republican pollster Whit Ayres was more cautious in projecting ahead to a possible 2020 GOP primary contest. He suggested that the variables that will determine whether there is or isn’t one include the outcome of this year’s midterms — will Republican­s still hold the House and Senate, hold one of those or hold neither — and where special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion ultimately leads.

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 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., greets students after speaking in Manchester, N.H., on Friday.
WINSLOW TOWNSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., greets students after speaking in Manchester, N.H., on Friday.

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