Las Vegas Review-Journal

Whither Trumpism post-trump?

- Contact Clarence Page via email at cpage@ chicagotri­bune.com.

AS a liberal about most political matters, I am not delighted that President Donald Trump’s nomination of conservati­ve Judge Amy Coney Barrett may be his most durable legacy.

But like the rapidly approachin­g Election Day, it gives new energy to an old question: After Trump, what happens to “Trumpism”?

The replacemen­t of 87-year-old liberal giant Ruth Bader Ginsburg with 48-year-old Barrett is expected to bring a new 6-3 conservati­ve majority that could endure for at least a couple of generation­s. Elections, as both political sides are muttering, do have consequenc­es.

Whether he loses this election or not, it’s not too early to contemplat­e what happens to the maverick movement he put together and surprising­ly rode into the White House.

The term “Trumpism,” as far as I can tell, rose up as a joke. Trump proudly presented himself as ideology-free, unencumber­ed by the factions and labels usually offered in convention­al parties and political science books.

As I have written before, I grew up in “Trump Country,” a Southern Ohio factory town where steel and paper mill jobs helped my family and me pay for my college tuition. Almost all of those jobs have disappeare­d in ensuing decades.

Most Trump voters I have known — and polling data I have examined — tell me they were won over a lot less by bigotry and sexism than by the sense that he simply was there, speaking to their despair and resentment­s that both major political parties had failed to acknowledg­e or address.

Which brings me back to Trumpism. The term is misleading because it implies an ideology supposedly held by a man who boldly shuns ideologies. Yet, since recent Gallup polls, among others, still show about 90 percent approval of Trump among Republican­s and about 36 percent among independen­ts, ambitious Republican­s already are jockeying for position to take his place.

Some of those who are seeking the relative sanity of the Grand Old Party are gravitatin­g toward moderates such as Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska or Gov. Larry Hogan, in predominan­tly Democratic Maryland.

But closer to Trumpian conservati­sm in these polarized times, Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri or Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a former Kansas congressma­n, may be better positioned for the near term.

Maybe. But after watching Trump bluster his way from outsider to victory in the 2016 primaries, I would not be surprised to see another renegade outsider such as Fox News’ Tucker Carlson or Sean Hannity rise from the legions of ambitious stars of right-wing political showbiz.

Politics is full of copycats, it has been said, especially when a seasoned rule-breaker such as Trump makes campaignin­g look easy. But a cautionary note: It’s not that easy. This time the party establishm­ent won’t be as quick to underestim­ate their rising outsiders’ chances.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States