USA TODAY US Edition

Personalit­y, not ideology, defines new Trumplican­s

- Susan Page Washington Bureau Chief

The abrupt ouster of Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney from the House GOP leadership Wednesday took only minutes, but the expected election Friday of New York Rep. Elise Stefanik to replace her is likely to reverberat­e through the Republican Party for years.

Stefanik’s election not only will launch the 36-year-old congresswo­man as a leading voice of the Republican Party, and at an age when she could have decades of political ambition ahead. Her rise – and Cheney’s fall – is also one more sign of the transforma­tion of the GOP into a party defined not by ideology, but by personalit­y.

Call it the Trumplican Party.

Stefanik is the prime case study in how a onetime establishm­ent Republican who had been critical of Donald Trump managed to become aligned with him and embraced by him. Only a handful of politician­s have successful­ly negotiated that complicate­d journey.

Over the long term, Trump’s redefiniti­on of the GOP may not be sustainabl­e, of course. Cheney and a handful of other prominent Republican­s warn that a day of reckoning is ahead over his debunked allegation­s that the election last November was stolen from him.

In the short term, though, Trump has once again done the unpreceden­ted, this time by continuing to dominate his party after losing the White House. In modern times, partisans at this point are typically debating changes in message and messenger, with the failed candidate an instant persona non grata.

But Trump has stalemated the 2024 presidenti­al field as he suggests he might run again – it would be a battle to deny him the nomination, if he wants it – and issues edicts and endorsemen­ts. They have shaped some contests in solidly red states such as, for instance, Cheney’s home state of Wyoming.

Now, ensconced in his retreat in Florida, he has succeeded in forcing the replacemen­t of the head of the House Republican Conference on Capitol Hill.

The issue wasn’t policy. Cheney’s record is more conservati­ve than Stefanik’s, with an 80% lifetime rating from Heritage Action for America, compared with 48% for Stefanik. Cheney’s record is more supportive of Trump, too, voting with him 92.9% of the time, according to a calculatio­n by Five-Thirty-Eight, compared with 77.7% for Stefanik.

In the early days of Trump’s tenure in the White House, Stefanik voted against his signature tax cut, opposed his ban on refugees from predominan­tly Muslim countries, and supported special counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into Moscow’s meddling in the 2016 election. Her history is with charter members of the GOP establishm­ent, as a staffer for President George W. Bush and for House Republican leader Paul Ryan.

But the essential issue for leaders in today’s GOP is no longer fiscal responsibi­lity or national security or cultural issues. It is loyalty to Trump.

Since Trump’s first impeachmen­t in 2019, Stefanik has become one of his most outspoken supporters. She has repeated allegation­s, found to be false by independen­t fact-checkers, that voting problems in Arizona, Georgia and elsewhere raise questions about whether Joe Biden was legitimate­ly elected.

Cheney’s firing offense was defending the 2020 election as fair and square.

Trump crowed about Cheney’s purge moments after it happened.

“Liz Cheney is a bitter, horrible human being,” he said in a caustic news release. “She has no personalit­y or anything good having to do with politics or our Country.” He called her “bad for the Republican Party” and “a talking point for Democrats” and “a warmonger.” He said her family “stupidly pushed us into the never-ending Middle East Disaster.”

That was a reference to her father, Dick Cheney, once a Wyoming representa­tive and member of the House Republican leadership himself before he was appointed to the Cabinet by President George H.W. Bush and then served as vice president for President George W. Bush – the sort of resume once seen as sterling in Republican circles.

In the new GOP, though, pols with last names like Cheney, Bush, Romney and McCain have been denounced by Trump. That roster of the rejected happens to include the three Republican­s who preceded Trump as the party’s presidenti­al nominee. Five years after he won the nomination himself, most of the voices in the party who decried him and opposed his policies are now either no longer in office, or no longer Republican­s, or largely silent.

At least for now, Republican voters express more loyalty to Trump himself than to the party that he represents.

As she emerged from Wednesday’s closed-door meeting Wednesday, which took all of 16 minutes to seal her ouster, Cheney vowed to be the exception.

“(The) nation needs a strong Republican Party; the nation needs a party that that is based upon fundamenta­l principles of conservati­sm, and I am committed and dedicated to ensuring that that’s how this party goes forward, and I plan to lead the fight to do that,” she said. “I will do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the Oval Office.”

Cheney, 54, said she would run for reelection next year; Trump has promised to back a rival in the GOP primary there.

“Bring it on,” she replied in an interview with NBC.

The battle for the No. 3 post in the House GOP has given Cheney a bigger megaphone and raised the profile of Stefanik. Stefanik has told colleagues that in the next Congress, she would seek to be designated the top Republican on the House Education and Labor Committee, according to Politico. There is idle speculatio­n about whether Stefanik would someday seek statewide office in New York, perhaps for the Senate, although her allegiance to Trump would not be an unalloyed asset in that blue state.

On Wednesday, she was focused on the 2022 congressio­nal midterms, when Republican­s hope to win back control of the House.

“Despite the media’s endless attempts to divide us, our Members are united in our laser focus on defeating the radical Socialist Democrat agenda of President Biden and Speaker (Nancy) Pelosi,” Stefanik wrote in a “Dear Colleague” letter asking for their support in her bid as conference chair.

She had already landed Trump’s endorsemen­t.

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 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., is poised to replace Liz Cheney as House Republican Conference chair.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., is poised to replace Liz Cheney as House Republican Conference chair.

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