Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE GOP PREPARES TO TEAR ITSELF APART

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The Republican Party has not had a moment’s rest since Donald Trump descended that escalator in Trump Tower in June 2015. And it might be about to enter its most tumultuous period in a long time.

In the wake of their surprising­ly poor showing in the midterm elections, Republican­s are preparing for a period of brutal intramural conflict. Suddenly, the party that remade itself in Trump’s image isn’t sure it likes what it sees in the mirror.

Or at least, some of them believe voters aren’t buying it. The GOP is chock-full of people who lined up behind Trump in 2016 not out of conviction but because they felt they had no alternativ­e. His support among their constituen­ts was undeniable, and he brought with him an intoleranc­e for disloyalty and a petty vindictive­ness. His win validated their decision, whatever moral compromise it entailed.

Yet each successive loss (the 2018 midterms, the 2020 presidenti­al race and now 2022) has made it harder for them to believe that Trumpism is the only way to win — and that they can survive saying so. Which is why even some politician­s considered Trumpy are now openly opposing him. Take Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, who touted her support for Trump and put up posters of herself holding a military-style rifle when she ran in 2021. Two days after the midterms, she went on Fox Business to say she couldn’t support him in 2024. The Wall Street Journal editorial board, house organ of the conservati­ve overclass, wrote an editorial titled “Trump Is the Republican Party’s Biggest Loser.”

One of the notable features of all this conflict is how disorganiz­ed it is. Some people have a beef with Rep. Kevin McCarthy or Sen. Mitch McConnell. Some are upset with Trump. Some want to put all their election denialism behind them. And many are just angling for their own advantage. It’s hard to draw a clear line between the establishm­ent and the insurgents.

That’s partly because the person who still leads the party — Trump — always presented himself as a scourge of the old guard. Trump loyalists, no matter how high their position, fancy themselves rebels, iconoclast­s or brave opponents of the stodgy and self-satisfied.

The truth is that Republican­s always enjoyed a little rebellion, so long as it was contained. Even George W. Bush, son of a president and grandson of a senator, sold himself as “a different kind of Republican” — an outsider who could whip the capital into shape.

But over the years, it became clear that many Republican voters really did regard the party’s leadership as a bunch of phonies and sellouts. It’s what the leadership struggled with all through the Obama years, and in 2016, Trump rode that discontent to the party’s nomination and then to the White House.

At the moment, it’s far less clear just what Republican­s are fighting about. It certainly isn’t substantiv­e issues; the party remains remarkably unified on policy, partly because outside of tax cuts and immigratio­n, they don’t care much about policy at all.

What is clear is that they now have a leader around whom all their political problems revolve. So some Republican­s rush to Trump’s side while conservati­ve commentato­rs call the midterms “a blinking, blaring, screaming sign that reads ‘Republican­s: Trump is your problem.’”

Trump himself will not stand by and watch, and that’s what will raise the stakes, and the intensity, of this iteration of the long-running intraparty debate. Trump has always believed that conflict and chaos work to his advantage, and he’ll demand that Republican­s be maximally combative.

One thing is for certain: This conflict will not be easily resolved. It will likely consume the Republican Party all the way to November 2024, and probably beyond. And we all may suffer the consequenc­es.

 ?? ?? Paul Waldman
Paul Waldman

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