Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

As GOP bends toward Trump, critics either give in or give up

Retirement of critical Republican­s signals party shift

- By Jonathan Martin and Jeremy W. Peters

Despite the fervor of President Donald Trump’s Republican opponents, the president’s brand of hard-edge nationalis­m — with its gut-level cultural appeals and hard lines on trade and immigratio­n — is taking root within his adopted party, and those uneasy with grievance politics are either giving in or giving up the fight.

In some cases, the retirement of an anti-Trump Republican could actually improve the Republican Party’s chance of retaining a seat. Sen. Jeff Flake’s decision Tuesday to not seek re-election was greeted with quiet sighs of relief in a party anguished by his plunging approval ratings.

But such short-term advantages mask a larger, even existentia­l threat to traditiona­l Republican­s. The Grand Old Party risks a longer-term transforma­tion into the Party of Trump.

“There is zero appetite for the ‘Never Trump’ movement in the Republican Party of today,” said Andy Surabian, an adviser to Great America Alliance, the super PAC that is aiding primary races against Republican incumbents. “This party is now defined by President Trump and his movement.”

On Wednesday, Joe Straus, the speaker of the Texas House of Representa­tives, announced that he would not run again, an indication that the Washington fever was spreading. Straus, a pragmatist with deep ties to the Bush family who had tangled with his state’s hard-liners, delivered a plea that Republican­s “appeal to our diverse population with an optimistic vision,” but he still chose flight over fight.

Straus’ dash for the exits followed the retirement announceme­nts of Flake, Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee and Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, Charlie Dent of Pennsylvan­ia, Pat Tiberi of Ohio and Dave Reichert of Washington state — all members of the Republican establishm­ent.

Many of those who remain will have to accommodat­e the president to survive primaries from the pro-Trump right. Already, in the high-profile campaigns of 2017 — governor races in Virginia and New Jersey and a special Senate race in Alabama — Republican candidates are mirroring

Trump’s racially tinged campaign tactics. And Republican officials are putting up with the sort of incendiary candidacy that a party more devoted to nurturing a tolerant image might have rejected.

The reason? Many of their voters prefer the Trump way.

“We’re not an element,” said Laura Ingraham, a pro-Trump talk show host. “We’re the party.”

Ingraham, the author of a new book, “Billionair­e at the Barricades,” on the populist uprising that helped elect Trump, said the conservati­sm of market-oriented internatio­nalism simply has little mass appeal.

“There’s no constituen­cy for open borders, endless war and these internatio­nal trade deals that are skewed against the United States,” she said.

Even some of the president’s detractors on the right believe that the party base will stick with him because they like his agenda.

“We have a leader who has a personalit­y disorder,” said former Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., “but he’s done what he actually told the people he was going to do, and they’re not going to abandon him.”

This grass-roots loyalty is why no prominent Republican­s on the ballot next year have broken with Trump — only lame-duck lawmakers and Republican­s out of office, such as former President George W. Bush, have been harshly critical of him.

At the moment, congressio­nal Republican­s and Trump are trying to make common cause of an overhaul of the tax code because they see it as something of a temporary cure-all. A bill-signing ceremony on taxes would hand lawmakers something to run on next year and the president a much-needed accomplish­ment.

“It stops the bleeding,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina.

On Wednesday, Trump painted a rosy picture of the party.

“We have, actually, great unity in the Republican Party,” he told reporters before leaving for a fundraiser in Texas.

But even as Trump won repeated standing ovations from Senate Republican­s on Tuesday when he visited their weekly lunch at the Capitol, the party’s lingering tensions were also on display. Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, a longtime member of the Agricultur­e Committee, expressed concern about whether Trump would pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement, according to a Republican present at the luncheon.

Less than an hour after Trump left the Capitol, Flake was on the Senate floor delivering a 17-minute excoriatio­n of the Trump era.

How aggressive­ly the president pursues his platform on trade and immigratio­n restrictio­nism could test how strong his grip is on Congress.

For now, though, the vision for a more populist-nationalis­t party sketched out by Bannon is being won as much through intimidati­on as through actual purges in Republican primaries.

What Bannon is trying to do — and what Flake’s retirement could further — is strike fear in the hearts of Republican­s who do not display enough enthusiasm for the nationalis­m that Trump ran on.

“This should be a warning shot to any other ‘Never Trumper’ in the Senate today: Your time is up,” Surabian said.

That is playing out not only in the examples of Flake and Corker.

In Nevada and Mississipp­i, Sens. Dean Heller and Roger Wicker have responded to Trump-inspired primary threats by taking steps to emphasize their fealty to Trump.

On Wednesday, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, endorsed former Judge Roy S. Moore in the Alabama Senate race, praising Moore, a caustic social conservati­ve, as “a tireless advocate led by principle rather than politics.” Cornyn is the highest-ranking Republican to formally back Moore.

But accommodat­ion is not giving pause to would-be rivals. Danny Tarkanian, Heller’s Republican challenger, said the conversati­on among activists was no longer dominated by finding the most conservati­ve candidates.

“The talk I hear is, ‘Hey, who’s going to support Trump’s “America First” policies,’” said Tarkanian, citing trade, military interventi­on and what he described as “worrying more about refugees from other countries than our own people.”

In the House, some lawmakers who have previously spoken out against Trump, such as Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala., are now working to repair their relationsh­ip with the White House.

“The message they’re sending is: The way to survive is by accommodat­ing him, changing their tone and professing loyalty to Trump,” said William Kristol, the former editor of The Weekly Standard and a vociferous Trump critic.

Whether Trump permanentl­y realigns the party around his style and platform may depend on how much he remains true to what could be called Trumpism.

“The best thing that could happen to Trump and the future of the Republican Party is for Trump to fix a broken immigratio­n system,” Graham said.

By calling to offer his support to a handful of Republican senators that Bannon had named as potential targets, the president demonstrat­ed he would not blindly follow his former adviser.

Establishm­ent Republican­s are attempting to convince Trump that “if you join with Bannon, you cut your own throat,” Graham said, because it could lead to an impeachmen­t effort by a Democratic-controlled Congress.

But these arguments cause the early Trump enthusiast­s only to roll their eyes. The party establishm­ent, these Trump backers say, wants to govern as if the election never happened.

“They still think the election was about Trump’s personalit­y,” Ingraham said. “It wasn’t. It was his ideas.”

 ?? GABRIELLA DEMCZUK / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., talks to reporters Tuesday on Capitol Hill after announcing he will not run for re-election in 2018. President Donald Trump has vocal critics, but the Republican Party is increasing­ly his own, with little room left for an...
GABRIELLA DEMCZUK / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., talks to reporters Tuesday on Capitol Hill after announcing he will not run for re-election in 2018. President Donald Trump has vocal critics, but the Republican Party is increasing­ly his own, with little room left for an...
 ?? TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump greets the crowd Wednesday upon arriving at Love Field in Dallas. Trump’s sharp nationalis­m, gut-level cultural appeals and hard lines on trade and immigratio­n are taking root within his adopted party.
TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump greets the crowd Wednesday upon arriving at Love Field in Dallas. Trump’s sharp nationalis­m, gut-level cultural appeals and hard lines on trade and immigratio­n are taking root within his adopted party.

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