The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump’s loyal fans pose challenges for GOP, Biden

- By Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON» Their candidate may have lost the election, but President Donald Trump’s supporters have no intention of fading away. After spending weeks amplifying Trump’s claims that the November election was rigged against him, many of his loyal fans are eagerly awaiting his next ventures, including a potential presidenti­al run in 2024.

In the meantime, they present a daunting challenge for President-elect Joe Biden: how to govern a bitterly divided nation that now includes many who not only disagree with his policies, but view him as the illegitima­te president who won only because of mass election fraud, which did not happen.

“The effort by the Trump forces to delegitimi­ze Biden has poisoned our political bloodstrea­m so badly that it could take years to recover,” said David Gergen, who served as an adviser to Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton.

Trump will leave the White House on Jan. 20 with an iron grip on the Republican Party that has been transforme­d on his watch. Once known for its country-club elites and embrace of military interventi­on and free trade, the GOP under Trump has become a populist party with an “America first” foreign policy that has alienated allies and fomented distrust in internatio­nal and domestic government institutio­ns.

“I think the Republican Party today is the party of President Trump, and so his positions are the positions of the Republican voters,” Sen. Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidenti­al nominee, recently told SiriusXM. The Utah senator

said he believes Trump’s “enormous influence” with the party is likely to wane to a certain degree as new faces step forward.

But among “those that are circling the 2024 race, beyond President Trump, it seems that many of them are headed in the same, more populist-oriented direction,” he said.

Trump has no intention of ceding the spotlight, as he openly flirts with running again in four years.

Trump will “loom very large over the Republican Party,” predicted Alyssa Farah, until recently White House communicat­ions director. Don’t expect Trump and Trumpism to “go off into the sunset,” Farah said.

“He’s got the most energetic base in modern political history,” she said. “What the party is going to face is

the reality that the president, even though it looks like he didn’t win, got more votes than a Romney, than a McCain, than any Republican candidate in history. And we can’t discount the voices of those 70 million Americans.”

What Trump’s post-White House future will look like is a work in progress.

He is expected to decamp to Florida with a small coterie of aides, where he will likely continue to use his Twitter account to reward allies and lash out at those who cross him, as he mulls his next venture. That has put many of those eyeing taking on his mantle to run in 2024 in an awkward position.

“Look, he’s the leader of this movement. No matter what happens in 2020, 2024 is there for his taking,” White House press secretary

Kayleigh McEnany said in a recent appearance on Fox News Channel. “His base is strong, they’re not going away.”

That also poses a conundrum for Biden, who will take the oath to lead the nation that appears more bitterly divided than at any time in modern history. Those divisions have only been exacerbate­d by Trump’s campaign to cast doubt on the integrity of the election, and overturn the will of the American people.

As a result, just 60% of Americans, including just 23% of Republican­s, believe Biden’s victory was legitimate, according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll.

Trump has repeatedly blamed his defeat on widespread voter fraud, despite the consensus of nonpartisa­n election officials that

there wasn’t any. Of the dozens of lawsuits the president and his allies have filed challengin­g election results, nearly all have been dismissed or dropped.

Gergen said the future of Trump’s base will likely depend on a number of factors, including how the media cover him post-presidency and whether he becomes embroiled in legal troubles. He predicted Trump’s actions will make it far harder for Biden to govern.

“It’s going to be harder for a lot of Republican­s to come to the negotiatin­g table,” Gergen said. He added that Trump’s backers were likely to “keep a lot of pressure on mainstream Republican­s not to break too often.”

Charlie Sykes, a conservati­ve talk radio hostturned-Trump critic who bemoaned Trump’s efforts to de-legitimize Biden’s election, sees the potential for long-term damage to trust in fundamenta­l Democratic institutio­ns.

“Trumpism is going to be a major force because he’s both a cause and symptom of our division,” Sykes said. “And he leaves behind him a legacy of real distrust, real divisions, Americans really not trusting one another, not trusting institutio­ns.”

Biden is well aware of the difficult road ahead in uniting the divided nation. But his aides have expressed confidence, pointing to positive signs, like General Motors’ recent decision to switch sides in its legal fight against California’s right to set its own clean-air standards. And they voice hope that Biden may be able to appeal to some of Trump’s working-class voters, with priorities like bolstering American manufactur­ing, and ensuring critical supplies are made in the U.S.

“We are realistic that there will always be folks who refuse to support the president-elect’s agenda that more than 81 million Americans voted for. But that’s not everyone,” said Biden transition spokesman TJ Ducklo. “We believe there are a lot of Americans who voted for Donald Trump who just want their elected officials to deliver meaningful help during this once-in-a-generation crisis.”

That will depend on people like Marthamae Kottschade, a self-described “Trumper” and member of “Trump’s Front Row Joes,” who traveled the county attending the president’s campaign rallies.

Kottschade, who lives in Rochester, Minn., said she still has her Washington, D.C., hotel room booked for Inaugurati­on Day and expects to see Trump sworn in again as president.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Supporters of President Donald Trump rally at Freedom Plaza in Washington on Nov. 14. His backers are expected to remain a force to be reckoned with.
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Supporters of President Donald Trump rally at Freedom Plaza in Washington on Nov. 14. His backers are expected to remain a force to be reckoned with.

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