Times-Call (Longmont)

Trump is not a colossus, and his party is a mess

- E.J. Dionne is on X: @Ejdionne

The prevailing wisdom after Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary win is that Donald Trump will be triumphant. But don’t mistake him for a colossus leading a mighty band. This view ignores the opportunis­m behind many of the endorsemen­ts he is winning and the sharp split between Republican­s who want to govern and those who don’t.

Though there is certainly polarizati­on between our parties, the primary cause of the deep distemper in American politics is the polarizati­on within the Republican Party. Trump’s apparent dominance distracts from what the behavior of elected GOP politician­s in Washington teaches us day after day: The party is a mess.

That doesn’t stop the Trump-is-all-powerful Industry from predicting he’ll go from strength to strength. Its argument is straightfo­rward: Even if former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley were to have won New Hampshire, which didn’t, the obstacles in her way are formidable. In the next major battlegrou­nd, Haley’s home state of South Carolina, Trump has a big lead.

Haley’s problems only got worse on Friday when Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) announced his support for Trump.

Trump’s victory in the Iowa caucuses created the feel of a party falling in behind him. Telling were endorsemen­ts from Sens. Ted Cruz (Tex.) and Marco Rubio (Fla.), two politician­s the vindictive front-runner repeatedly mocked, humiliated and slandered. On Sunday, Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, whom Trump routinely referred to as “Ron Desanctimo­nious,” dropped out of the race and endorsed his tormentor. So much for self-respect.

But even if the punditry proves right, the GOP is in no way cohesive or coherent. Just look at the Republican majority in the House, which can’t govern without Democratic help. Meanwhile, Senate and House Republican­s are at odds on the most important foreign policy question of the moment: whether the United States will continue to stand up against Vladimir Putin’s aggression in Ukraine.

In the House last week, Republican­s were divided into almost perfect halves over whether to keep the federal government open until at least March: They voted 107-106 for a deal between House Speaker Mike Johnson (RLA.) and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.).

To get the supermajor­ity he needed, Johnson required nearly unified Democratic support — 207 votes to 2.

In negotiatio­ns pairing help for Ukraine with enhanced border security, Democrats have given enormous ground on immigratio­n, to the point at which Senate Republican­s are reduced to begging their House comrades to accept a win.

Even Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), one of

Trump’s most enthusiast­ic apologists, lectured his colleagues on reality: “To those who think that if President Trump wins, which I hope he does, that we can get a better deal — you won’t.”

If the Senate reaches a bipartisan deal and Johnson rejects it, he will be the reason Ukraine isn’t funded and the United States loses credibilit­y around the world.

Even Trump’s big victory in Iowa belied the idea that Trump’s army would walk through fire for him. Many were plainly unwilling to ignore the bitter cold and icy roads on caucus night. Only about 110,000 of the roughly 750,000 registered Republican­s in the state participat­ed, down more than 40% from the 187,000 who joined the last competitiv­e caucuses in 2016.

The divisions among those hardy voters were deep, pointing to President Biden’s opportunit­ies to drive wedges into the GOP electorate. The entrance poll found that Trump drew just 37% among college graduates, compared with 67% among non-graduates. Caucus-goers split down the middle as to whether they considered themselves part of the MAGA movement (46%) or not (50%.). Three-quarters of the NON-MAGA voters opposed Trump.

And 31% said they would not consider Trump fit to be president if he were convicted of a crime — a significan­t number, considerin­g the loyalty to the GOP of the small minority willing to brave the elements.

Sure, Democrats have their divisions, too. Party loyalists range from the center to the left, and some of their loud fights doomed parts of Biden’s program in the last Congress. But what’s remarkable is how much they did pass with narrow House and Senate margins — and, in the case of the infrastruc­ture and technology investment­s, with bipartisan support.

The difference is that Democrats want to govern because they believe government has a chance to do good. This means even the party’s most left-wing members will compromise to take a step or two forward even when they want to take four.

Republican­s, on the other hand, are riven between those willing to govern — even, occasional­ly, with Democrats — and those who will be satisfied only if Trump is president. They presume this would allow them to roll over the left, the liberals and the moderates alike.

Failing to see the GOP as a party torn asunder allows Trump to seem stronger than he is. He uses this perceived supremacy to cow Republican­s who hold the quaint view that governing in a reasonable and (smalld) democratic way is the point of getting elected. Is it just wish-casting to think New Hampshire might seize the opportunit­y to send them the message that it’s their duty to fight back?

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