Hartford Courant

Is there still Trumpism after Trump?

- Ross Douthat Douthat is a columnist for The New York Times.

Way back in the days after the 2012 election, the last Republican presidenti­al defeat, all the convention­al wisdom in politics converged on a simple idea:

The GOP was doomed unless it became, in effect, a moderate party of the business class, stiff-arming social conservati­ves and wooing Hispanic voters by promising more liberal immigratio­n laws.

Against this consensus, a few observers made dissenting points: First, a lot of working-class white voters who tilted Republican had stayed home amid Mitt Romney’s business-class campaign in 2012, and second, the Hispanic vote was hardly a single-issue-voting, pro-immigratio­n monolith. So it was as easy to imagine Republican­s surviving in a changing country by simply becoming more populist on economic issues as it was to imagine them moving in the more libertaria­n direction favored by the party’s donors and consultant­s.

After two national elections with Donald Trump at the top of the ticket, those dissenters can claim a lot of vindicatio­n. For the second presidenti­al cycle in a row, notwithsta­nding plague, economic crisis and his own immense faults, Trump was a competitiv­e candidate with a coalition that was more blue-collar and nonwhite than the Republican vote in 2012. Relative to four years ago, he turned out even more whites without college degrees in many states and increased his support from African Americans and in heavily Hispanic areas.

In those trends, you can see the foundation of a possible after-Trump conservati­ve majority that is multiethni­c and middle class and populist, an expansive coalition rather than a white and aging rump. And the competitiv­eness of the existing Trump coalition, the fact that he wasn’t simply routed as the polls had predicted and his party came through the election in better-than-expected shape, makes it less likely that his would-be successors will try to rewind the clock to 2012. Instead, they will promise to reassemble his populist coalition as a first step, rather than trying to rebuild around the now-Democratic-trending mass upper class.

But if Trump’s coalition was competitiv­e, Trump himself was defeated, no less than Romney in 2012. So the question for GOP politician­s auditionin­g to be Trumpists after Trump is whether they have a plan to build back bigger, to make the right-populist coalition the majority it could be rather than the strong minority it is.

The optimist’s take is that the way to do this is clear: Trump was at his most unpopular when he behaved grotesquel­y and ceded policymaki­ng to the Republican old guard, so his would-be successors need to act less like tin-pot tyrants, eschew the ranting and the insults, and also make good on some of the policy promises Trump left by the wayside. A populism 2.0 that doesn’t alienate as many people with its rhetoric, that promises more support for families and domestic industry, that accepts universal health care and attacks monopolies and keeps low-skilled immigratio­n low, all while confrontin­g China and avoiding Middle East entangleme­nts and fighting elite progressiv­ism tooth and nail — there’s your new GOP majority.

But there are other possibilit­ies.

One is that some of the voters who turned out for the GOP in the last two presidenti­al cycles were drawn in by Trump’s celebrity charisma as much as by any of his policy arguments — that if he alienated suburban women with his finger-in-your-eye behavior, it also helped elevate his appeal with the country’s disaffecte­d blocs. In which case you can’t just shave off the rough edges and expect a different politician to claim the same support. Rural white voters in Wisconsin who felt forgotten by both parties, or Latino men around Miami alienated by wokeness, or for that matter the rebellious grassroots conservati­ves who backed Trump’s 2016 primary campaign — do any of them respond the same way to a Republican who has picked up the language of populism but comes across as a stuffed shirt rather than a tough guy, a nerd rather than a tycoon, a politician rather than a star?

Then even if it were possible for another Republican to claim and expand his coalition, it’s not clear that Trump himself will let that happen. For one thing, he might run again, and he will certainly keep that possibilit­y open. It’s always been clear that Trump would nurture a stab-in-theback narrative should he lose; now that we know that the race was genuinely close in several key states, his stolen-election narrative may be potent enough to push conservati­sm toward the fever swamps and away from a constructi­ve populism, a Trumpism that can win.

So Trump will exit the presidency with a complicate­d and uncertain legacy — as both the man who opened the way to a possible populist majority, and one of the biggest potential obstacles for Republican­s who want to tread that path.

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