The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump history analysis lies in future

- David Shribman Columnist David Shribman

He hasn’t even been the former president for three months, but already it has started. The historians’ evaluation of Donald J. Trump is underway. It’s not as easy as it looks.

Of course, many commentato­rs and historians made tentative judgments while he still was in the White House. Profession­al historians aren’t exactly the jury that the 45th president would choose; men and women who teach in universiti­es, who seek to discover facts through research, who tend to be more contemplat­ive than emotive, are not his best focus group. And a Chronicle of Higher Education survey of 2016 voting patterns in counties holding each state’s flagship public university — the 2020 election doesn’t count, because so many students were home because of the virus — showed that Trump prevailed in only 20% of them.

Making quickie assessment­s has been something of a historians’ tradition; Princeton University Press, which has commission­ed this process, produced swift historical evaluation­s shortly after the presidenci­es of George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Now the historians are on to Trump, and they cannot avoid questions like these:

Was Trump’s election the result of his own personal appeal, or was his appeal the perfect match of the man and the moment? Or is there a more cynical explanatio­n?

This is a complicate­d question. Trump — the only president never to have served in either the military or public office — was by any measure an unusual White House nominee.

The question is whether Trump’s ability to speak to the dispossess­ed and less educated was a manipulati­ve parlor trick performed by a wealthy graduate of an Ivy League university, or whether he was at base an outsider, much like his base, spurned by the fancy people of Manhattan whose approbatio­n he failed to win and dismissed by the coastal elites of which he was never a member, despite his New York home. It is possible that both are true, but that debate will rage long after the Princeton press sets its volume in type.

Was Trump a transforma­tional president producing a fundamenta­l realignmen­t, or were the 2016 and 2020 elections purely the result of his presence as the Republican nominee?

The answer will not be known until the 2024 election, or perhaps 2028, but the historians will have to confront this question in 2021. If his victory in 2016 and his strong but unavailing performanc­e in 2020 were due principall­y to his own personal appeal, then he is a less consequent­ial historical figure than he would be if the reverse were true. But if he has performed in the second decade of the 21st century what Roosevelt achieved in the fourth decade of the 20th, then he will be remembered as a far more consequent­ial figure.

Did Trump overhaul and then take over the Republican Party?

We don’t yet know the answer to this, either, but the tentative verdict suggests he did. It’s difficult to cite a modern analogue, though Theodore Roosevelt comes close as someone whose progressiv­ism transforme­d the early 20th-century GOP, as does the unlikely figure of Warren G. Harding, whose siren call for “normalcy” shed the last remnants of the TR ethos in 1920.

What is the future of the GOP in a country and era of rapid demographi­c change?

The party’s 2012 autopsy, warning that the prospect of a majority-minority America and the aging out of white male conservati­ves posed a mortal threat to the GOP, has been dismissed by some Republican theorists. Those believing that a healthy Republican Party is an essential element of a healthy American body politic worry that verdict may yet be relevant. Part of the answer will come from how potential presidenti­al candidates like Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri, both challenger­s of the 2020 election results, package themselves in 2024, and whether Trump runs again.

What was the true nature of the Jan. 6 rebellion?

This, too, awaits the passage of time, but the tentative conclusion does not put the president in a favorable light, as the private (and in the case of Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, the public) rumination­s of many Republican leaders suggest. And if that riot is followed by another, or by episodes of homegrown terrorism unrelated to the 2020 election, fresh questions about domestic tranquilit­y will be unavoidabl­e.

And how rugged are American democratic institutio­ns anyway?

Part of the answer will come from the evaluation of how fundamenta­lly Trump challenged those institutio­ns. But some will come from reflection­s, and perhaps revelation­s, on how close the Jan. 6 rebels came to taking over the Capitol. Historians seek answers to the conundrums they identify in the past. But this time around, many of the answers will come in the future.

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