Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Can anyone save GOP?

- Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a New York Times columnist.

Bill Weld, the former Massachuse­tts governor and current long-shot—make that loooooooon­g-shot—candidate for the Republican Party’s presidenti­al nomination, is a keen student of New Hampshire politics.

In an interview with me this week, he noted the following fact: Every time an incumbent president of either party faced a significan­t primary challenge in the Granite State, he failed in his bid for re-election.

It happened to George H.W. Bush in 1992 after Patrick Buchanan took 38 percent of the New Hampshire vote.

It happened to Jimmy Carter in 1980 after Teddy Kennedy took 39 percent.

It happened to Gerald Ford in 1976 after Ronald Reagan took 48 percent.

It happened to Lyndon Johnson in 1968 after Eugene McCarthy took 42 percent.

It happened to Harry Truman in

1952 when Estes Kefauver beat him outright, 55 percent to 44 percent.

So, Weld reasons, why not try to make it happen to Donald Trump, too?

That’s the hopeful thought in what otherwise seems to be Weld’s hopeless bid to derail a president whose support among Republican­s was 89 percent last month, according to Gallup. Weld is too much a politician to admit publicly that he sees no shot for himself of winning—a Messiah complex lies at the root of many monumental ambitions.

But he’s also wise enough to know that losing well can achieve great things, like bringing down a president who, he said, “regards the law as something to be evaded.”

Can that be done between now and Feb. 11, the date of the New Hampshire primary? Weld rests his hopes on two things: New England Republican­ism, which remains alive and well despite reports of its demise; and Trump’s trial in the Senate, whose result may not yet be a forgone conclusion.

On the former, note that Vermont, Massachuse­tts and New Hampshire all have Republican governors who, like Weld, are relative moderates compared to the rest of the party. New England Republican­s can also be fickle in their loyalties and late to make up their minds: Buchanan was also seen as a non-starter against Bush Sr. just weeks before the 1992 primary.

On the latter, Weld knows a lot about the impeachmen­t process, having worked on the House Judiciary Committee’s staff as a young lawyer in 1974 as it considered articles against Richard Nixon.

Nixon, Weld recalled, “was essentiall­y forced to withdraw from the presidency because he had been caught lying on television to the American people on one topic”—a foothill of a deception compared to Trump’s Karakoram range.

Weld also knows how quickly things can turn in the course of a trial. “Cases don’t look the same at the end as they do at the beginning,” he noted, recalling his prosecutio­ns of public corruption in the 1980s as U.S. attorney for the District of Massachuse­tts, where he won 109 conviction­s in 111 corruption cases. He believes that if four Republican senators join Democrats in voting to call witnesses—Ohio’s Rob Portman could provide the decisive vote— then anything is possible.

“The one sport where the unthinkabl­e can become the inevitable in a matter of weeks or even days,” Weld said, “is national politics, not the National Football League.”

The odds against? I’d say 20-to-1— which is to say still worth a shot. If it fails, Weld said he would not run as an independen­t. Unlike in 2016, when he ran with Gary Johnson on the Libertaria­n ticket (and won 4.5 million votes), he has no interest in playing the spoiler to anyone in the race except Trump.

The larger question if it fails is what becomes of the GOP. Weld compared the party to the late-stage Whigs of the early 1850s, riven between the nativist Know Nothing faction and the anti-slavery wing that would become the Republican Party of Abraham Lincoln. Fortunatel­y, the good side won that time.

This time? The best conservati­ve case for rooting for a Democrat to win this fall—any Democrat, including Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren—is that it might be the only way to save the Republican Party from itself. That could happen if a critical mass of conservati­ves repudiates Trumpism or forms a new party on the Lincoln model. Weld calls it the Liberty Party.

Alternativ­ely, a Sanders or Warren victory could send the GOP to even further extremes. In politics, as in nature, forces always come in pairs. Democrats who want to see Republican­s recover their center need to protect their own. In the meantime, wish Bill Weld well in his Granite State carom shot.

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