Is Trump the last GOP presidential nominee?
If the US president destroys the party, his Republican critics may have no interest in picking up the pieces to fight for in 2020
he Concord Monitor, in New Hampshire, reported last week: “John Kasich is coming back to the first-in-thenation primary state. The two-term Ohio governor and 2016 Republican presidential candidate will headline a fireside chat at New England College in Henniker on April 3 as part of the school’s President’s Speaker Series.” As if you had any doubt, the Monitor dryly noted that Kasich’s trip “will once again fuel rumours that he’s considering another White House bid in 2020.”
Even if Kasich were certain to run, however, there’d be considerable question as to whether he’d run as a Republican. His future in the Republican Party and the future of the party itself are now very much in doubt. If President Donald Trump actually completes his term and runs again in 2020, it will be because the GOP rallied around him, kicked to the curb any sliver of doubt about supporting a racist and misogynist, and gave up the pretence it is the vanguard of constitutional conservatism and Abraham Lincoln. In the fully and permanently Trumpized GOP, it would be impossible for Kasich, a fiscal conservative, an advocate of immigration reform and a traditional internationalist in foreign policy, to find a majority or even plurality to support him.
If Trump runs again in 2020, Kasich would seem far better suited for an independent run. Yes, we know, independents historically have fared poorly. Yes, we know, the difficulties involved in gaining ballot access are significant. However, the completed metamorphosis of the GOP into an ethno-nationalist party would leave a political vacuum. The desire for a new political grouping — especially if the Democratic Party goes far left — could be palpable.
Former New Hampshire Republican senator Gordon Humphrey tells me, “2020 offers an opportunity for someone in the Reagan/Kemp mould to run as an independent, promising to unite the country on the basis of civility and decency in public discourse and respect for the Constitution and to pursue traditional conservative policies of limited government, strong defence, and assertive promotion of freedom and free trade in foreign policy.” In Humphrey’s view, “the Republican 2020 nomination will not be worth fighting for. Trump and his unprincipled Republican enablers have so soiled the brand that it will not recover for a very long time.” In the meantime, Humphrey argues, “there is now a broad avenue between the parties that would collect the votes of traditional conservatives from both parties and from the ranks of independents, constituting a plurality, if not a majority, in the general election”.
Natural place to start
As he points out, New Hampshire has more independent voters than it does either Democrats or Republicans. (Humphrey himself re-registered as an independent the day after the presidential election.) It is noteworthy that Humphrey strongly supported Kasich in 2016. New Hampshire, then, would be a natural place to start a third-party or independent run.
Two years is forever in the American political environment. By 2020, the GOP majority in one or both houses of Congress could have been lost; Trump might have been removed from office or forced to resign. The Republican Party could be in shambles, with Vice-President Mike Pence the crippled heir to Trump, facing significant doubts about his own judgement and knowledge of events leading to Trump’s downfall. In such a case, there could be a robust race between two camps. On one hand, the Trump wing (e.g., Pence, Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton). In the other camp, an array of more traditional Republicans who never drank the Trump KoolAid (e.g., Kasich, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, Arizona Senator Jeff Flake, Tennessee Senator Bob Corker) would declare the Trump era to be over.
And yet, even in that situation, with Trump gone and disgraced, it’s not clear there would be enough NeverTrump or exTrump-supporting Republicans around.
Therefore, Kasich would be wise to keep his options open. A couple of years from now, he may be one of several NeverTrump Republicans fighting over the GOP’s carcass — or, alternatively, the first nominee of a new party or even an independent candidate with a historically unique opening. In any event, it’s smart for him to start visiting New Hampshire.