New York Post

The plot against Trump

Audience plants show how desperate the establishm­ent is to bring him down

- by MICHAEL WALSH Michael Walsh’s new book, “The Devil’s Pleasure Palace: the Cult of Critical Theory and the Subversion of the West,” was recently published by Encounter Books.

BACK in the days of Richard Nixon and Watergate, Donald Segretti had a word for it. Unfortunat­ely, I can’t use that word in a family newspaper, but suffice it to say it had something to do with rats and everything to do with a vulgarism for political dirty tricks: using plants and doubleagen­ts in order to embarrass a candidate and boost their own man’s chances.

Last week it was GOP frontrunne­r Donald Trump’s turn to get, well, ratfreaked. A young woman at a campaign event in New Hampshire — selfrighte­ous, hands on hips, aquiver with indignatio­n — popped up to declare, “I don’t think you’re a friend to women.” (“I knew I shouldn’t have picked her,” Trump immediatel­y joked.)

Oops. Turns out that the woman, identified as Lauren Batchelder, 18, is a college volunteer for the fading candidacy of Jeb Bush.

The Bush campaign immediatel­y backpedale­d away — but not before getting its digs in: “While this question was not sanctioned by the campaign,” said a Jeb spokeswoma­n, “we can’t help but notice Mr. Trump does seem to be very sensitive about being challenged by women.”

Given that Trump has been married to three highprofil­e women and has an equally highprofil­e daughter, Ivanka, that’s doubtful. But it illustrate­s that in the age of the outsider candidate (Trump, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina), the GOP establishm­ent is having a devil of a time figuring out a way to stop him. Trump currently maintains his lead in the Real Clear Politics average of national polls, with Carson second and Fiorina in fourth place behind Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

This wasn’t the first time Trump has had to face questioner­s of dubious provenance. Last month in a rally in New Hampshire, a stillunide­ntified man sporting a Trump Tshirt popped up to opine that, “We have a problem in this country. It’s called Muslims. We know our current president is one.”

Trump’s typically New Yorkstyle reaction to the statement was one of laughter and “we need this question.” In the cold light of print that may look like the realestate mogul was endorsing the statement, but in fact was simply a sarcastic expression of disbelief. Trump went on to foul off the pitch and then quickly turn to another questioner.

Still, the Donald was pummeled by the leftwing media for not “correcting” or “denouncing” the sentiments. His reply to critics: “I decided, why should I come to the defense of the president? He’s not going to come to my defense.”

After the event, journalist­s couldn’t find the man who asked the question. He mumbled his name into the microphone. Consider what happened with Batchelder, what are the chances “Muslim president” guy was a plant as well?

Whatever the case, it’s clear that the Trump phenomenon is giving profession­al politician­s a severe case of heartburn. The GOP establishm­ent, already reeling from the surprise defeat of former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor in Virginia last year and the announceme­nt late last month that John Boehner will soon give up both his House seat and his speakershi­p, has been caught flatfooted by the rise of Trump and the other nonprofess­ional politician­s and is desperatel­y seeking a way to stop them.

Measures being bruited now include making candidates swear fealty to whomever turns out to be the nominee, and pledge not to run as a thirdparty candidate. Failure to do so would be punished by loss of ballot access.

Problem is, the traditiona­l candidates aren’t achieving liftoff. Jeb Bush combines the worst qualities of his father and brother without any of their strengths; he’s also already spent a fortune, with almost nothing to show for it. Rubio — as Obama was when he first ran in 2008 — is an ambitious freshman senator who hasn’t even served a single full term, and is sacrificin­g a hardwon Senate seat to boot, just to further his own ambition.

Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum are retreads. And sitting governors John Kasich, Chris Christie and Bobby Jindal have yet to set many hearts aflutter.

So the GOP is now facing its worst nightmare: What if Trump is for real? That behind all the bluster, beneath the weird hair, is a guy who just might be able to clean out the Augean stables of the Permanent Bipartisan Fusion Party that continues to cling to power in Washington.

The Democrats — with their eminently indictable presumptiv­e nominee, Hillary Clinton — don’t like the idea of fundamenta­l change any better than the Republican­s. They prefer GOP opponents who don’t fight back, lose gracefully, and keep their seats at the national trough.

The odds are still against Trump. But longsuffer­ing voters of both parties staring at a possible Clinton-Bush flashback, might be forgiven for thinking that this year, maybe, just maybe, things could be different. And all the rats in the world won’t change their minds.

 ??  ?? Lauren Batchelder (inset), who tried to embarrass Trump at an event, was a volunteer for Jeb Bush.
Lauren Batchelder (inset), who tried to embarrass Trump at an event, was a volunteer for Jeb Bush.

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