El Dorado News-Times

Damaged Trump could weigh down Republican­s

- CARL GOLDEN Columnist Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgolden193­7@gmail.

Despite a few points in her testimony in dispute, the narrative laid out by former White House assistant Cassidy Hutchinson concerning the events of Jan. 6, 2021, presents a chilling portrait of a furious president desperatel­y clinging to power surrounded by advisers offering outlandish legal theories to block the certificat­ion of Joe Biden as president.

Hutchinson, a 26-year-old former assistant to then White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, offered a compelling tale to the congressio­nal committee investigat­ing the siege of the Capitol, depicting President Trump as the central figure in devising a plot to remain in office while refusing to intervene to halt the mob swarming the Capitol.

While most congressio­nal Republican­s were either muted or vague in their reactions, they must have cringed inwardly at her descriptio­n of senior executive staff aware in advance of the storming of the building and the potential for it to turn deadly yet failed to act.

In the most surreal recounting, Hutchinson told the committee Secret Service agents responsibl­e for Trump’s safety informed her the president attempted to wrest control of the armored vehicle in which he was riding after the driver refused his order to be taken to the Capitol at the height of the assault.

Her story was immediatel­y challenged by Secret Service officers who said the incident never occurred, while Republican critics accused her of peddling outrageous secondhand hearsay as solid evidence. The committee attested to her credibilit­y while Republican critics ratcheted up their characteri­zation of the panel as a one-sided partisan political show trial that had predetermi­ned conclusion­s before the first witness was heard.

Her testimony will have no significan­t impact on the congressio­nal midterm elections, in which voters are more concerned with $5 a gallon gasoline than whether Trump berated his security detail.

But the steady drumbeat of testimony revealing an administra­tion obsessed with remaining in power and seriously debating skirting the law to do so have nicked the former president and led some national Republican­s to distance themselves from Trump without renouncing him altogether and earning the wrath of his followers.

While Trump continues to tease a 2024 presidenti­al candidacy, there is a growing body of opinion that the cumulative effect of accounts of his involvemen­t in the Jan. 6 upheaval will weigh heavily on voters’ decisions and a criminal case against him would doom his chances. His volcanic temper is legendary as is his history of relying on his own instincts – frequently with damaging results – while disregardi­ng the counsel of more experience­d and level-headed advisers, most notably those who warned that interferin­g in the certificat­ion process came dangerousl­y close to criminalit­y.

Party leaders justifiabl­y fear that candidate Trump will use a campaign platform to re-litigate his 2020 loss and continue to promote unfounded conspiracy theories of massive voter fraud.

With Biden’s approval rating plummeting to the mid 30 percent level and Americans battered by unpreceden­ted inflation and potential recession, Republican­s sense a genuine opportunit­y to recapture the White House while controllin­g the House and possibly the Senate.

The party dream of unified control is within reach but could be buried by a Trump presidenti­al candidacy based on an imaginary political cabal that cheated him of victory four years previously.

Americans are yearning for a leader to replace a Biden administra­tion that seems incapable of dealing effectivel­y with punishing cost of living increases, an immigratio­n crisis, crime ridden cities and shortages of everyday living necessitie­s while embracing left-leaning social welfare ideas.

Doubts are seeping in that Trump is that leader. His candidacy would become a daily reminder of his erratic and chaotic four years, capped by the storming of the Capitol which his Administra­tion encouraged and stood by as the violence spun out of control.

Cassidy Hutchinson’s portrayal of the Trump White House has emboldened Republican­s to begin to move from beneath Trump’s shadow. The path is a narrow one, a delicate balance between recognizin­g Trump’s grip on his political base and the imperative to rise above the din and uproar exemplifie­d by the former president and appeal to the concerns of American voters.

It is time to accept the road to the Oval Office does not run through Mar-A-Lago.

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