Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP COULD FACE PRIMARY CHALLENGER

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It’s getting to the point where it’ll be easier to list the Democrats who are not running for president in 2020. But the roster on the Republican side remains a minority of one.

That may change. As Jonathan Last of The Bulwark notes, primary challenges of sitting presidents are more normal than many think. Of the nine sitting presidents who’ve sought re-election since 1964, five faced opponents from their own party.

More significan­tly, there’s demand for a primary challenge. A new NPR-PBS-Marist poll found that Republican­s are essentiall­y divided evenly on the question. Asked if they’d like to see a challenge, 44 percent of respondent­s said they’d like to see a challenge, 45 percent said no, and 11 percent said they were unsure.

This doesn’t necessaril­y mean that nearly half of all Republican­s want to see Trump defeated in the primaries. According to a recent Des Moines Register poll, Trump has an 81 percent approval rating among registered Republican­s in Iowa, and 67 percent of them say they’d vote to re-elect him.

But almost as many Republican­s (63 percent) said they would welcome a challenger in the Iowa caucuses. Polls show similar attitudes in New Hampshire.

For Trump’s biggest fans, this is crazy talk. But most of Trump’s biggest fans are old, and they tend to rely on traditiona­l conservati­ve media outlets for their understand­ing of the political landscape.

Among young people generally, Trump’s approval rating hovers at around 30 percent. Last year, an Axios survey found that more than 80 percent of Republican­s and Republican “leaners” between the ages of 18 and 24 wanted to see Trump challenged in a primary, compared with 74 percent of Republican­s over the age of 65. According to the NPRPBS-Marist poll, a majority of Republican­s under the age of 45 would like to see a Republican challenge Trump.

Writing for the Weekly Standard last year, Ben Shapiro argued that this generation­al chasm can be attributed in part to young conservati­ves being more idealistic than the old folks who now care more about “winning” than getting hung up on ideology. “Older conservati­ves judge Trump on his politics; younger conservati­ves judge Trump on his values,” Shapiro wrote.

I’m focusing on young people because the traditiona­l route for a primary challenger is almost surely foreclosed by Trump’s fervent obsession with holding on to his base. Typically the threat to a sitting president comes from the populist ranks of the base: Patrick Buchanan’s attack on George H.W. Bush, for instance, and even Ross Perot’s.

While Trump’s offer to end the partial government shutdown by trading concession­s on the so-called Dreamers for wall funding has angered the likes of Ann Coulter, it’s still unlikely that crowd would support a primary opponent.

But there is the Sen. Eugene McCarthy model. In 1968, McCarthy opposed Lyndon Johnson in the New Hampshire Democratic primary. He lost, but he did well enough to force Johnson out of the race. His campaign relied on young, idealistic college students who got “clean for Gene” by shaving off their beards and cutting their hippie hair.

Trump probably wouldn’t react the way LBJ did. But the incentives for a young Republican looking to be a standard-bearer and leader of the future are strong.

The media would lavish coverage on a GOP primary fight. Moreover, once a challenger steps in, the chances improve that an even bigger name would join the fray.

There are other scenarios. If Trump’s approval rating drops even more, because of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe or a faltering economy, it could open a path for a slew of Republican­s seeking the nomination to save the party from a 2020 Democratic landslide.

We’re not there yet. But if a lot of those older Republican­s like winning, they might be convinced to back a candidate with a better chance of doing that.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

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