Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP INDICTMENT WOULD PUT GOP IN A BIND

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It looks increasing­ly likely that former President Donald Trump will be indicted by Manhattan prosecutor­s over alleged hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels. Republican politician­s and other party officials who have tried to avoid taking a position on Trump and the 2024 nomination — the keep-quiet Republican­s — are running out of time. Like it or not, they are going to have to choose sides.

Up to this point, keeping quiet was a viable strategy. Not a very brave one! But politician­s are rarely courageous and sometimes problems just solve themselves, so ducking the issue had a logic to it. Taking on Trump would have risked alienating voters and party elites who remain steadfast supporters.

But once there is an indictment, staying neutral is no longer a smart option. The single biggest remaining question about Trump will have been answered, and the problem will no longer solve itself. Trump quite possibly will be a candidate under indictment as the Republican presidenti­al nomination is being decided.

Whatever Trump’s countless previous transgress­ions, a criminal charge is a watershed moment that will be exponentia­lly more difficult for the GOP to dismiss. It also makes more real the possibilit­y of additional indictment­s on matters more consequent­ial than the potential violation of campaign-finance law likely at issue in the Stormy Daniels case.

Devout Trump voters will remain in the former president’s corner no matter what. But there is a significan­t segment of the Republican electorate, perhaps up to two-thirds of the total, who seem open to other Republican contenders. If enough high-profile Republican­s say that having a nominee under indictment would be a disaster for the party, plenty of uncommitte­d Republican­s will accept it, perhaps enough to swing the nomination against him. But if all they hear from Republican­s is that Trump is being unfairly persecuted, many of them will commit to the former president for good.

Political nomination­s are collective decisions, not just individual choices. The more solidarity there is among influentia­l party figures, the more effective they will be. So if only a plurality of prominent Republican­s decide to make a public break with Trump, it will still reverberat­e strongly through the party.

Even if the New York indictment turns out to be a false alarm, it’s a reminder to Republican­s that there could be bad news coming. And if one prosecutor takes the step of indicting a former president, the chances are that others, who will no longer have to worry about being the first to ever do so, will act as well.

Republican­s certainly shouldn’t believe the cliché that nothing would scare away Trump voters, a mantra that somehow has survived his failed re-election campaign where it turned out that some things did matter. Yes, Trump’s strongest supporters and even most regular Republican voters will continue to vote for Trump and the Republican ticket regardless of his legal predicamen­t. But those who already might have been wavering might not. And losing voters at the margins is a very efficient way of losing elections.

 ?? ?? Jonathan Bernstein
Jonathan Bernstein

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