Los Angeles Times

GOP infighting leaves no clear path forward

RNC leader calls for unity, but the party’s Trump loyalists may not want to move on.

- By Steve Peoples Peoples writes for the Associated Press.

DANA POINT — Ronna McDaniel has become the longest-serving leader of the Republican National Committee since the Civil War. But now, she must confront a modernday civil war within the GOP.

Frustrated Republican­s from state capitals to Capitol Hill to the luxury Southern California hotel where RNC members gathered this week are at odds over how to reverse six years of election disappoint­ments. While there are strong feelings, there is no consensus among the fighting factions about the people, policies or political tactics they should embrace.

On one side: a growing number of elected officials eager to move beyond the divisive politics and personalit­y of former President Trump, despite having no clear alternativ­e. On the other: the GOP’s vocal “Make America Great Again” wing, which has no cohesive agenda yet is quick to attack the status quo in both parties.

“It will be extraordin­arily difficult, if not near impossible, for Ronna McDaniel to put the pieces back together,” said Republican fundraiser Caroline Wren, a leading voice in the coalition of far-right activists, conservati­ve media leaders and local elected officials across the country who fought and failed to defeat McDaniel. “These people are not just going to forget.”

Indeed, as RNC members packed up Friday from the ballroom of the Waldorf Astoria in Dana Point, there was broad agreement that McDaniel’s reelection would do little to heal the gaping divide that plagues their party, even as she celebrated her decisive victory.

Trump quickly congratula­ted McDaniel on his social media platform after privately helping her campaign.

But conservati­ve activist Charlie Kirk, a Trump loyalist, likened McDaniel’s reelection to a “middle finger” for the GOP’s grassroots who demanded change at the institutio­n that leads the party’s political activities.

“The country club won today,” Kirk said from the back of the ballroom where RNC members from across the country voted to give McDaniel another two-year term. “So, the grassroots of people that can’t afford to buy a steak and are struggling to make ends meet, they just got told by their representa­tives at an opulent $900-a-night hotel that we hate you.”

A similar sentiment roiled the Republican Party earlier in the month on Capitol Hill, as Kevin McCarthy struggled through days of embarrassi­ng defeats in his quest to become House speaker before acquiescin­g to the demands of the antiestabl­ishment MAGA fringe.

McCarthy’s inability to control the hard-line Trump loyalists in his conference threatens to undermine a high-stakes vote on the nation’s debt limit that could send shock waves through the U.S. economy if not resolved soon. So far, House Republican­s haven’t articulate­d a specific set of demands.

Some see the Republican divide as a byproduct of the GOP’s years-long embrace of Trumpism, a political ideology defined by its focus on a common enemy and a willingnes­s to fight that perceived foe, no matter the cost.

McDaniel has repeatedly highlighte­d the perils of GOP infighting as she campaigned for an unpreceden­ted fourth term as RNC chair. On Friday, she pleaded for Republican unity while citing a Bible verse that was invoked by President Lincoln before the Civil War.

“Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation, and every city or house divided against itself will not stand,” McDaniel said from the ballroom podium. “Nothing we do is more important than making sure that Joe Biden is a one-term president. But in order to do that, we have to be unified.”

It may get worse before it gets better.

The conclusion of the RNC’s winter meeting marks the unofficial beginning of the 2024 presidenti­al primary season. Trump has already launched his candidacy and promises to wage a fierce campaign against any Republican competitor­s.

The RNC is in the process of scheduling the first Republican presidenti­al primary debates, which will likely take place in Milwaukee, the site of the party’s next national convention, in late July or early August.

While he has been slow to hit the campaign trail since announcing a 2024 bid last November, Trump held events over the weekend in New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Sensing political weakness in the former president, as many as a dozen highprofil­e Republican­s are expected to line up against him in the coming months.

Should he fail to clinch the GOP’s next presidenti­al nomination, Trump has dangled the possibilit­y of a third-party presidenti­al bid, which would all but ensure that Democrats win the White House in 2024.

New Hampshire-based RNC member Juliana Bergeron reflected upon the state of her party as she prepared to take a red-eye flight home to attend Trump’s Saturday appearance. The New Hampshire GOP is working through its own bitter leadership feud.

“The party in New Hampshire is divided. The party nationally is divided. I just think there’s a lot of space between the far right and some of the rest of us,” Bergeron said.

“I think it’s over,” she said when asked about Trump. “I want to see a new generation out there.”

There are signs that Trump’s MAGA movement may be ready to move on as well.

Some privately acknowledg­ed that Trump had lost control of his own movement, which worked to defeat McDaniel even as the former president and his lieutenant­s tried to help her.

While Trump declined to publicly endorse McDaniel, it wouldn’t have changed the grassroots’ demand for new GOP leadership, Wren said.

“We’re not just sheep that follow a single endorsemen­t anywhere,” Wren said. “We want to win elections, and we’re not winning elections.”

Indeed, Republican­s may need a successful national election in order to come together again.

The next national election: Nov. 5, 2024.

“The hard work now begins for bringing our party together,” said former Trump chief of staff Reince Priebus, a former RNC chair who backed McDaniel’s reelection. “This isn’t going to be easy.”

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