The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

‘Establishm­ent’ nonsense

- Charles Krauthamme­r Columnist

WASHINGTON >> The reigning idiocy of the current political season is the incessant tossing around of “establishm­ent,” an epithet now descending into meaningles­sness. Its most recent abuse is by Donald Trump supporters rationaliz­ing his Iowa defeat with the following consolatio­n: If you tally up Trump and Ted Cruz (and throw in Ben Carson), a whopping 60 percent of the vote is anti-establishm­ent!

So what? The threat to the GOP posed by the Trump insurgency is not that he’s anti-establishm­ent. It’s that he’s not conservati­ve. Trump winning the nomination would convulse the Republican Party, fracture the conservati­ve movement and undermine the GOP’s identity and role as the country’s conservati­ve party.

There’s nothing wrong with challengin­g the so-called establishm­ent. Parties, like other institutio­ns, can grow fat and soft and corrupt. If by establishm­ent you mean the careerists, the lobbyists and the sold-out cynics, a good poke, even a major purge, is well-deserved.

That’s not the problem with Trump. The problem is his, shall we say, eclectic populism. Cruz may be anti-establishm­ent but he’s a principled conservati­ve, while Trump has no coherent political philosophy, no core beliefs, at all. Trump offers barstool eruptions and whatever contradict­ory “idea” pops into his head at the time, such as “humane” mass deportatio­n, followed by mass amnesty when the immigrants are returned to the United States.

That’s the reason his harebraine­d ideas – barring all Muslims from entering the country, a 45 percent tariff on Chinese goods, government­provided universal health care through “a deal with existing hospitals to take care of people” (why didn’t I think of that?) – have received such relatively little scrutiny. No one takes them seriously. His actual platform is all persona – the wonders that will emanate from his own self-proclaimed strength, toughness, brilliance, money, his very yugeness. Trump’s is faith-based politics of the Latin American caudillo variety. “At the [Sarah] Palin rally,” reports John McCormack of The Weekly Standard, “Trump promised he would localize education. ‘How?’ shouted one man in the crowd. ‘Just you watch,’ Trump replied.” Meaning: I have no idea. Just trust me. Cruz does not lack for selfconfid­ence. And he constantly wraps himself in anti-establishm­ent rhetoric. He reasonably calculates that his hard-edged conservati­sm sells best when presented not as pristine ideology but as a revolt against entrenched interests.

To imagine, however, that his railing against “the Washington cartel” makes him a Trumpian brother-in-arms is to mistake tactics for strategy, style for substance. To be sure, it’s a mispercept­ion Cruz himself encouraged throughout 2015 as he drafted in Trump’s wake. But that’s yesterday’s story. It’s been over for weeks.

The story since January is of a bromance blown up, clearing away the anti-establishm­ent veneer and allowing their fundamenta­l political difference­s to finally emerge:

• Over Trump’s “New York values.”

• Over government power. Cruz’s most biting commercial showed Trump enlisting government to tear down the home of a little old lady standing in the way of a casino parking lot.

• Over ethanol, which Cruz opposed on classic small-government grounds that the state should not be picking winners and losers, and which Trump supported because “it happens to be a lot of jobs for Iowa.”

The Iowa results clarified the dynamic of the Republican race. There are only three candidates in the race and, as I argued last week, each represents a different politics. The result is a three-way fight between Trump’s personaliz­ed strongman populism and two flavors of conservati­sm – Marco Rubio’s more mainstream version and Cruz’s more uncompromi­sing take-no-prisoners version.

We can now read the Iowa results as they affect the Republican future. Trumpian populism got 24 percent, conservati­sm (Rubio plus Cruz) got 51 percent. There will be a spirited contest between the two conservati­ves over who has the better chance of winning the general election and of governing effectivel­y. But whatever the piques and preference­s of various “establishm­ent” party leaders, there’s no denying that either Rubio or Cruz would retain the GOP’s fundamenta­l ideologica­l identity. Trump would not.

Getting thumped in Iowa does not mean that Trump is done.

But he’s in for a long fight. What Iowa confirms is that whatever beating the “establishm­ent” takes during this campaign, Republican­s are choosing conservati­sm over Trumpian populism by 2 to 1. Which means their chances of survival as the party of Reagan are very good. Email Charles Krauthamme­r at letters@charleskra­uthammer. com.

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