Chattanooga Times Free Press

IN 2016, TRUMP WAS LUCKY TO WIN. IN 2024, HE’S DESPERATE

- Matt Bai

This time around, there will be no ambivalenc­e.

Not from the party that eight years ago tried to mount a hopeless last stand against him. And not from the candidate himself, who never seemed all that jazzed about becoming president in 2016 and almost certainly didn’t expect to win.

This time, watching Donald Trump romp through the Super Tuesday primaries on his way to the Republican nomination, I see a man who is running as if his survival depends on winning back the White House — because, in a very real sense, it does.

I’ve been wrong a lot when it comes to Trump, but I’m pretty sure I was right about one thing: Trump didn’t begin his presidenti­al campaign in 2015 with some Wile E. Coyote-type plan to upend the party and take over the country. Like everything else Trump had done in his life to that point, that campaign began as little more than a Barnumesqu­e exercise in self-promotion, a chance to further the family brand.

It was happenstan­ce, really — a collision of celebrity and social media, a nativist backlash against the Obama era, and a seething resentment toward the Clintons, the Bushes and the bankers — that made Trump’s rise possible. He didn’t need much by way of strategy or money. He needed only to break through the fourth wall of politics — to look directly into the camera, like the practiced realitysho­w star he is, and channel the rage of the audience.

It must have surprised Trump to find that the Republican Party could be acquired and replaced as easily as a failing hotel chain. In the eight years since that election, culminatin­g in Mitch McConnell’s decision to step aside as the Republican Senate leader this year, Trump has done something that only presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan managed to do in the century before: remake a party and reorder the electorate.

By attracting large numbers of alienated independen­ts and driving out some correspond­ing faction of old-line conservati­ves, Trump has fundamenta­lly changed what it means to be a Republican — isolationi­st instead of muscular, chillingly nationalis­t instead of ruggedly individual­ist. The real RINOs (Republican­s in name only) now are the party’s Trumpist leaders themselves, who fly the tattered flag of their predecesso­rs but embrace an entirely different agenda.

For Trump, however, all that conquering has come at a cost. His name, once a gaudy but coveted asset among hoteliers and resort-builders, is now anathema to a lot of the high-end customer base. Trump’s brand seems to have more value now on a pair of spray-painted sneakers than it does on the front of a high-rise.

Even as he finds it harder to leverage his name for cash, Trump’s liabilitie­s keep mounting. Thanks to recent court verdicts, he now owes more than half a billion dollars in damages, and he won’t be able to operate what remains of his New York business for three years. He still faces two federal prosecutio­ns; for the first time in his fast-dealing, illusion-conjuring career, Trump faces the very real possibilit­y of trading his red tie for an orange jumpsuit.

Politicall­y speaking, all of this is a gift. New York City’s trivial prosecutio­n about hush money for an affair, along with the circus that now threatens to overtake Trump’s prosecutio­n on election-meddling charges in Georgia, have helped Trump’s public cause immensely, allowing him to credibly portray himself as the victim of a leftist legal establishm­ent.

But Trump must know that his chances of riding out this storm as a private citizen — without incurring some serious damage in the form of financial ruin or a prison term — aren’t good. There is only one sure way out.

If you want to worry about autocracy in America, this is what you should worry about. It’s never a good betting strategy to predict Trump’s behavior, but at heart, he’s always been more of a craven entertaine­r than a scheming monarchist. He might not care very much about the principles of a democracy, but neither is it clear that he cares enough about the things he does care about — immigratio­n, trade, white nationalis­m — to try to impose his will on the courts or the military.

But if there’s one thing we can infer from Trump’s career as a con man, it’s that he will do whatever it takes to save himself. The presidency would cloak him in a temporary immunity, which he desperatel­y needs. Would he use his control over the Justice Department to shut down prosecutio­ns? Absolutely. Would he attempt the legal contortion­s of issuing himself a blanket pardon? Bet on it.

Within days of his second inaugurati­on, Trump would turn the executive branch into his sanctuary and his law firm, an instrument of protection and retributio­n. Everything else — and everyone else — would come second.

In 2016, Trump’s improvised campaign was a lark. Eight years later, he is running with the ferocity of a desperate man. For the star of politics’ greatest reality show, cancellati­on is no longer an option.

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