National Post

Can Trump actually be the GOP nominee?

REPUBLICAN RACE IS SHAPING UP AS TWO DISTINCT CONTESTS

- Dan Balz in North Charleston, S. C.

Eighteen days before the Iowa caucuses, the Republican nomination contest has come down to two big questions: Can Donald Trump actually become the party’s 2016 presidenti­al nominee, and if he falters, who can emerge to seize the crown?

What was unthinkabl­e a few months ago no longer is. Trump’s durability in national polls and his standing in the early states have forced GOP leaders — and all his rivals — to confront the possibilit­y that the New York billionair­e and reality TV star could end up leading the party into the fall campaign against the Democrats.

Trump is anything but a typical front-runner. In fact, he is the most unconventi­onal and atypical front-runner for as long as anyone can remember. And unless and until he actually wins primaries and caucuses, the race will remain what it has been for months: a confusing mash-up among a relative handful of candidates looking to pick up the pieces of a possible Trump breakdown.

Almost everything about Thursday’s debate here in South Carolina underscore­d the current state of the campaign. It featured a series of sharp exchanges between Trump and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and efforts by the other candidates to break through by showing they could be tougher on President Barack Obama than any of their rivals.

The GOP race is now commonly defined as a pair of contests. The first features Trump and Cruz fighting to emerge as the leading candidate in what is either defined as the anger lane, the populist conservati­ve lane or the outsider lane. In their own ways, both Trump and Cruz embody the vibrant antiestabl­ishment anger of the grassroots.

The other contest is the battle among more mainstream conservati­ves, representa­tives in one form or another of a nervous party establishm­ent worried about protecting down- ballot candidates in the fall.

That battle features Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former Florida gov- ernor Jeb Bush. Normally, the establishm­ent is in the driver’s seat in nomination battles. This time, those candidates have found themselves on the defensive.

But nothing is quite as clean as all that. Trump occupies space largely defined by his unique candidacy. He is not a pure conservati­ve in any sense of the word. Although his and Cruz’s support overlap, Trump is in a lane of his own. It remains to be seen whether his support is wide, deep and loyal or shallow and fickle in the face of any signs of weakness.

Attacks are now flying in all directions, as the debate demonstrat­ed. Cruz and Trump, who spent most of last year playing nice to each other, traded blows over whether Cruz, born in Canada to an American mother, is eligible to be president and over whether the values of New York are out of touch with those of the rest of the country. Cruz scored points on the first, while Trump effectivel­y countered the second with a paean to New York’s collective response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Because there is no dominant figure among the establishm­ent candidates, they are all firing at one another. Bush and his wellfunded super PAC have been the most aggressive of late, but Christie, Rubio and Kasich are using what resources they have — whether advertisin­g and direct mail or TV and print interviews — to launch their own assaults.

Thursday’s debate, however, highlighte­d the plight of the establishm­ent candidates. Overshadow­ed by Trump and Cruz, they struggled to stand out. Christie and Rubio traded harsh words at one point, and Bush sought several times to undermine Trump. All tried to use their time to attack Obama. But no one seemed to gain much ground.

The other reality of the campaign is that it is playing out separately in Iowa and New Hampshire. In Iowa, Trump and Cruz are the clear leaders. A few weeks ago, Cruz held a double- digit lead in a Des Moines Register- Bloomberg Politics poll. This week, that same poll showed his lead over Trump down to three percentage points.

Given polls that show Trump well ahead in New Hampshire, the outcome in Iowa has huge implicatio­ns. A Trump victory in Iowa would send seismic shocks through the party. No Republican in the modern era has won both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.

A Cruz victory in Iowa, however, would rattle the establishm­ent almost as much as a Trump victory, if not more. Unique among the elected and former elected officials in the race, Cruz campaigned from the start with an eye toward tapping anti-Washington sentiment among party conservati­ves. Party leaders fear Cruz as the nominee could bring about a landslide loss in November. Cruz, who has played the campaign as smartly as anyone to date, is determined to disprove the doubters.

The establishm­ent battle takes place primarily in New Hampshire, where Rubio, Christie, Kasich and Bush are seeking to emerge as the candidate with the momentum to carry the fight well into the spring. Right now, however, that battle is for second place. Not since then-governor Bill Clinton came in second in New Hampshire and declared himself the “comeback kid” has runner-up offered as many rewards as in this year’s GOP race.

But there are other cross- currents. As much as the Trump- Cruz contest defines the Iowa race, the battle for third place there also has real implicatio­ns. Rubio holds third place in the RegisterBl­oomberg poll, but Ben Carson, who once led in the state, is just a point behind.

None of the other candidates, with the possible exception of Trump, wants to see Rubio as the clear third- place finisher in Iowa. Establishm­ent candidates know that if Rubio takes third there, he will have momentum heading toward the New Hampshire primary eight days later.

LEADERS FEAR CRUZ ... COULD BRING ABOUT A LANDSLIDE LOSS.

 ?? ANDREW BURTON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Republican presidenti­al nomination candidates, from left, Donald Trump,
Ted Cruz, Ben Carson and Jeb Bush arrive at Thursday’s debate.
ANDREW BURTON / GETTY IMAGES Republican presidenti­al nomination candidates, from left, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Ben Carson and Jeb Bush arrive at Thursday’s debate.

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