The Oklahoman

Marriage heading for ugly divorce

- Jonah Goldberg

Bad marriages usually lead to ugly divorces, and that's where the GOP is heading.

After Donald Trump secured the Republican nomination in 2016, the word went forth on the right: It's a binary choice. You're either for Hillary or you're for Trump. In a two-party system, the claim was defensible. The peculiar thing is that even after Trump was elected, the “binary choice” bullying never went away; it just changed from “Hillary or Trump” to “for Trump or against him.”

There were left-wing and right-wing versions of this all-or-nothing mentality, the former requiring total resistance to all things Trump, the latter total support. But it was the right-wing version that probably cost Trump the election. And it's now threatenin­g to tear apart the GOP.

On cable TV, talk radio and right-wing web platforms that dedicated themselves to round-theclock Trump support, Trump's minor successes were celebrated as unpreceden­ted victories. His major successes were offered as proof of the president's almost superhuman qualities. His failures were usually explained in one of two ways. They were either proof of his fourdimens­ional chess master genius — just wait, this is part of his master plan! — or evidence that powerful, sinister forces were underminin­g him: the “deep state,” the establishm­ent, the “fake news” media, the cultural Marxists, the military-industrial complex, the “never Trump” fifth columnists or a combinatio­n thereof.

Because Trump's narcissism was so profound, he responded to criticism with the political equivalent of a nuclear counterstr­ike. And because Trump's insecurity was infectious, his fan base — which had outsize power in primaries — would follow suit. This ensured that most Republican politician­s shouted their praise of Trump and muzzled their criticism.

The same dynamic applied to most right-ofcenter media and many conservati­ve institutio­ns. Kellyanne Conway may have been joking in 2017 when she said CPAC (the Conservati­ve Political

Action Conference) was now TPAC, but it didn't take long for her observatio­n to seem prophetic.

Institutio­nalized Trump narcissism probably cost him the election, because the superhuman image he insisted his loyalists embrace never reflected the reality on the ground. Many Republican­s were in fact not that into him. They liked the judges, the tax cuts, even some of the “own the libs” bombast. But they were turned off by the self-indulgence, the conspiracy theorizing and the constant need for praise and attention. Still, few conservati­ve politician­s or media figures were willing to say so.

The result was a massive turnout of anti-Trump voting. The bulk of it manifested as historic turnout among Democrats enraged by four years of being trolled by the president. But a significan­t chunk of it took the form of Republican­s or Republican­leaning voters who split their tickets or declined to vote for the top of the ticket. In normal times, if you're willing to vote for a Republican governor, senator or congressma­n, you are by definition a gettable vote for a Republican presidenti­al candidate. But Trump lost in many states where other Republican­s won. It's true, as Trump says, that he got more votes than any Republican president; he just didn't get enough of them.

To the extent that there is any good faith to the false claims the Democrats stole the election, it can be explained by the fact that many Republican­s, including Trump himself, believed the pro-Trump propaganda they have been fed for four years. If you actually think the president can't lose, that the American people are with him and that the shadowy forces he was battling are real, why wouldn't you scoff at the idea Biden won?

But Biden did win. And that fact is shattering the Temple of the Binary Choice on the right.

For four years, Trump was president, which also meant he was the de facto head of the Republican Party. This allowed the acolytes of Trumpism — however you want to define that sloppy term — to marry Trumpism, nationalis­m, patriotism, populism, tribalism, MAGA, etc., to old-fashioned party loyalty.

That marriage is over now.

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