Daily Press

It seems like Trumpism, regrettabl­y, is here to stay

- Carl P. Leubsdorf Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

When Donald Trump was elected president, many analysts saw the result as a fluke resulting from Hillary Clinton’s unpopulari­ty and her campaign errors.

They expected it all to go away in four years.

Well, those of us who felt that way have been proven at least partially wrong. Though Trump’s election was something of a fluke and he lost the White House four years later, neither he nor his movement has gone away. Indeed, the cancer in our politics called Trumpism is showing continuing signs of metastasiz­ing.

That means it will likely remain a permanent part of the political landscape, regardless of this year’s results.

And that’s because the former president and his followers are working to ensure they will maintain their hold on the GOP and its attendant units well beyond 2024. Their success marks a historic shift in power from more institutio­nalist-minded Republican­s to those beholden to an individual and his unproven claims that the 2020 election was rigged. Just consider the following three developmen­ts.

The recent installati­on of Michael Whatley and Lara Trump at the top of the Republican National Committee exemplifie­s the extent to which Trump’s forces have taken over the GOP party structure. The next few months will see Trump-dominated Republican National Convention delegation­s install pro-Trump committee members where they hadn’t previously done so.

That will affect decisions on such things as the party’s rules for its next nominating contest, in 2028, regardless of what role Trump himself may be playing at that time.

The Trumpifica­tion of the Republican House and Senate leadership­s continues apace. Mike Johnson’s selection as speaker

of the House reflected a significan­t victory by the pro-Trump Freedom Caucus over the party’s institutio­nalists. Johnson was a leading supporter of Trump’s legal challenges to President Joe Biden’s 2020 win.

And if the GOP loses the House this November, a more rabid Trumper, such as Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, could well replace the mild-mannered Johnson as the House Republican leader.

In the Senate, meanwhile, GOP leader Mitch McConnell’s decision to step down will mean a new leader less antagonist­ic to Trump. And if he wins in November, a more avid ally like Montana Sen. Steve Daines could well supplant the current front-runners, South Dakota Sen. John Thune and Texas Sen. John Cornyn.

Earlier, McConnell’s failure to mobilize a majority of Republican senators to support continued aid for Ukraine showed that, like the House, the Senate GOP is moving

toward Trump’s America First views.

Meanwhile, more GOP elected officials outside Congress have joined in echoing Trump’s positions, from denying the 2020 results to opposing Ukraine’s battle against Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked invasion.

Pro-Trump governors run Texas, Florida and many other GOP-controlled state government­s.

The long-standing GOP issues establishm­ent in Washington, exemplifie­d by Reaganite groups like the Heritage Foundation, is being supplanted by more aggressive pro-Trump organizati­ons that are developing proposals and personnel for a new Trump presidency.

Publicatio­ns from Axios to The New York Times have detailed the effort of leading Trump administra­tion figures like immigratio­n hardliner Stephen Miller, former budget chief Russell Vought and ex-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows to create and fund these organizati­ons.

Unlike the chaotic onset of Trump’s initial term, a new one would begin with detailed plans to install pro-Trump personnel and launch pro-Trump policies, starting with Trump’s vow to “shut the border” and “drill, drill, drill” on Day 1.

In a 2023 speech to the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, Trump boasted, “when we win in 2024, we will do it again even stronger, faster and better.” The reason: “I know the people that have to do the job and can do the job.”

According to the Times piece by Robert Draper, key policy and personnel groups include three major players.

The America First Legal Foundation, created by Miller to file legal challenges against the Biden administra­tion and recruit lawyers to serve as department­al general counsels in a second Trump administra­tion.

The Center for Renewing America, a policy developmen­t and messaging organizati­on run by Vought, who looms as a key policy developer for a new Trump presidency. Politico says it is drafting plans to endow a new administra­tion with “Christian nationalis­m” values and adopt hardline policies like invoking the Insurrecti­on Act to use the military to quell protests.

The Conservati­ve Partnershi­p Institute, which Draper called “a full-service nerve center for right-wing activity and a breeding ground for the next generation of Trump loyalists.” Its top executives include former South Carolina Sen. James DeMint, who was fired from the Heritage Foundation for seeking to link it closer to Trump, and Meadows.

If Trump wins, officials and policies from these groups are likely to infuse his new administra­tion. If not, they’ll start preparing for 2028. Whatever Trump’s eventual fate, Trumpism is regrettabl­y here to stay.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY ?? A supporter of former President Donald Trump brandishes a banner at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on Feb. 22 in Maryland.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY A supporter of former President Donald Trump brandishes a banner at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on Feb. 22 in Maryland.
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