The Pak Banker

Don't count Trump out

- Thomas Gift and Julie Norman

Is Donald Trump's 2024 bid for the White House finished just as it's started? That seems to be the new convention­al wisdom. After last Tuesday's "red wave" failed to materializ­e - with Trump-endorsed candidates and other election deniers losing winnable seats - many experts have been predicting Trump's inevitable crash-and-burn.

Such forecasts haven't just come from Trump's favorite target of ridicule - the liberal "mainstream media." For example, a headline from the conservati­ve New York Post stated, "Trump voters are 'done' with ex-president: 'He needs to disappear.'" GOP strategist Karl Rove declared that, "[w]ith no red wave, Trump is out at sea."

For many commentato­rs, the 2022 midterms point unmistakab­ly to Trump's waning grip on the Republican Party. But is Trump really toast? Much as we wish otherwise, there's reason for doubt. Here are five post-election talking points about Trump that we think miss the mark.

Democrats have celebrated the midterms as a "win for democracy" following the defeat of many MAGA candidates. The votes don't lie: Democrats won key gubernator­ial contests against Trump-backed candidates in Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan, Wisconsin and Arizona, and crucial Senate seats in Pennsylvan­ia, Nevada and Arizona.

But despite defeats in high-profile swing-states, it's easy to overlook some simple facts: The majority of GOP candidates who questioned or denied the 2020 election results were victorious, with more than 170 projected to win, mostly in House and state-level contests. Even more, the non-partisan Cook Political Voting Index found that nearly 150 Trump-endorsed candidates surpassed their baseline expectatio­ns by 1.52 points.

The election win-loss record also obscures the significan­t voter base that still rallies behind MAGA candidates. With many races decided by just 1 to 2 percentage points, and the Georgia Senate race headed to a run-off, it's evident that Trump voters still comprise an outsized portion of the electorate.

An oft-repeated lesson from the midterms is that "candidate quality matters," with some in the GOP explicitly blaming Trump for backing candidates who cost the party. On issues from abortion to claims of 2020 vote rigging, critics say, moderates rejected fringe Republican­s who appealed only to the hard right.

But don't expect humility from Trump. Despite reports of initially fuming over the results, Trump has already left the "no spin zone," boasting of the "tremendous" wins that he delivered through endorsemen­ts. In Trump's MAGAverse of "fake news" and "alternativ­e facts," the reality is one of his own making.

Trump is scapegoati­ng others, and he'll continue to frame the results as proof of the need to have the name "Trump" at the top of the ticket. A Trump-endorsed candidate is one thing, but the unique, iconoclast­ic Trump himself is another. Trump's base is likely to stick by him, even - or especially - if he's considered an underdog.

If last Tuesday was a gloomy night in Mar-a-Lago, it was a party in Tallahasse­e for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who romped to a nearly 20 percentage point victory. The win solidified the rising conservati­ve star's place on the national stage, and polls this week showed DeSantis edging out Trump for the first time as the preferred GOP nominee for 2024.

DeSantis has the momentum and is the consensus rival to take on Trump. But he's unlikely to be the only competitio­n. If the perception is that Trump's hold on the party has loosened, other contenders will enter the Republican primary race, if only to bolster their image or to position themselves as vice presidenti­al picks.

Former Vice President Mike Pence, former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and others might not overtake DeSantis. But they could still split the vote enough to anoint Trump the victor. If Russia-gate, Impeachmen­t 1.0 and Impeachmen­t 2.0 suggest anything, it's that roughly 30 percent of Americans will support Trump no matter what.

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