Posted on 01/17/2024 6:27:52 PM PST by libh8er
It’s a tidy parable about GOP politics in the Trumpocene: A brash billionaire provocateur positions himself as the heroic guardian of the pieties of self-made success, and then collapses into a petulant litany of grievance, xenophobia, and conspiracy mongering. As of Tuesday, Vivek Ramaswamy, the sketchy biotech financier who ran his 2024 campaign for the presidency as Donald Trump’s Gen Z mini-me, has departed from the MAGA playbook for obtaining maximum national power: After a disappointing fourth-place showing in the Iowa caucuses, netting him just 8 percent of the vote in a race that allotted delegates by percentage results, Ramaswamy announced that he was pulling the plug on his candidacy.
Like the flailing campaign of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who wheezed his way toward an anemic second-place finish in Iowa, Ramaswamy’s presidential run points up the acute limitations of Trump mimicry as electoral strategy. But where DeSantis has run as a pluperfect ideological enhancement of Trumpism, Ramaswamy mostly followed the path of rhetorical belligerence and ever-expanding complements of camera-ready paranoia. There was always a core tension between Ramaswamy’s karaoke-style MAGA refrains about woke takeovers, border invasions, and deep-state perfidy and his pitch from the C-suites, based on his pledge to preserve the sainted American meritocracy. How could an achievement-based private sector spontaneously reclaim its prerogatives in a social order honeycombed with scheming elite apostles of CRT, DEI, and other acronymic affronts to libertarian orthodoxies?
Ramaswamy didn’t bother trying to explicate such analytic tensions; instead, he just amped up the MAGA sloganeering to 11, and tried to outshout and out-pander his non-Trump rivals in the GOP field. He told reporters prior to the third Republican presidential debate in Miami that his strategy was to be “unhinged,” and that was one campaign pledge that commanded his unyielding fidelity. In that performance alone, he called Ukraine President Voldymyr Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, “a Nazi…in cargo pants” and, sensing that his rivals were running short on novel ways to bomb Mexico and kill cartel leaders there, pledged to enact similar draconian measures to militarize the country’s northern border with Canada, since “you have to skate to where the puck is.” He also darkly characterized January 6 as “an inside job” and cast doubt on official accounts of the 9/11 terror attacks—both feints into conspiracy mode that seemed to serve little electoral purpose beyond further stimulating the grievance-addled nerve ends of MAGA nation.
Such frenetic Trump cosplay never seemed likely to land in any serious way with the MAGA faithful. Ramaswamy faced an additional hurdle in appealing as a lifelong Hindu to an Iowa GOP electorate that’s two-thirds evangelical—a gap that he sought to bridge with frequent allusions to Bible verses, and a 10-truths stump speech that began with the affirmation “God is real.” Toward the end of his campaign, Ramaswamy’s usual manic lust for attention seemed to fade. Even his signature antigovernment vow to shitcan half the federal workforce (a proportion he later desperately upped to three-fourths) pretty much at random during his first year in office, felt like a tired riff on the master’s “You’re fired!” catchphrase from The Apprentice.
As he sought to punch through to the true-believing MAGA base in Iowa, Ramaswamy also took a big tactical risk in dismissing Trump’s own viability in the 2024 election, again darkly intoning that an all-powerful yet ill-specified political elite is determined “to eliminate Trump from contention and trot in their puppet to the White House.” Ramaswamy nonetheless awkwardly tried to telegraph his own fealty in making this pitch, circulating a photo on the platform formerly known as Twitter in which supporters sported T-shirts reading “Save Trump, Vote Vivek.” Such displays soon brought down the wrath of Trump, who notified his TruthSocial followers that the former MAGA lapdog was now working to “disguise his support in the form of deceitful campaign tricks. Very sly, but a vote for Vivek is a vote for the ‘other side’—don’t get duped by this. Vote for ‘TRUMP,’ don’t waste your vote! Vivek is not MAGA.” Trump campaign flacks took up the same refrain; senior Trump campaign Chris LaCivita groused on Twitter that Ramswamy was “this campaign’s number one fraud,” and that “if you support @realDonaldTrump, you sure as hell don’t vote for this FAKE.”
This explosion of MAGA-branded rancor has effectively closed off the one remaining rationale for a Ramaswamy candidacy—to position himself as a kind of MAGA-fied Dan Quayle, i.e., a next-generation-branded running mate on a presidential ticket seeking to convey some sort of symbolic appeal to a younger electorate. Yet that pitch was always going to be a hard sell to a terminally vain septuagenarian at the top of the ticket who gleefully recirculates videos, paintings, and social media posts depicting him as an ultrabuff superhero, wrestler, and all-purpose messiah. No, the final humiliation for arch-capitalist Vivek Ramaswamy was that his candidacy was a product that the market firmly rejected at every turn. That message was underlined in the deflating epilogue to the announcement of his suspended campaign: He was, of course, endorsing the very man who branded him an agent of non-MAGA deceit. Call it a crash course in the actual workings of the fabled American meritocracy.
Source, The Nation…’nuff said.
Nobody does Trump like Trump.
(A nod to Nobody Sings Dylan Like Dylan-—a 1966 Columbia Records ad campaign.)
Vivek will be involved in politics longer than the author is alive.
One good reason to post The Nation: unlike Pravda, it’s in English.
Vivek didn’t crash and burn like the writer for this jealous rage of an article did. I bet also this pathetic jealous writer won’t get a top job in the White House either like this ‘billionaire’ will LOL.
Journos love to write obits on politicos.
Nobody charts journos ups and downs, because nobody cares about them.
The Nation continues its proud tradition of being absolute left-wing trash.
Vivek is likable enough but he hardly “Crashed and Burned” since his campaign was never really going go anywhere anyways.
I was thinking the same.
Vivek was Trump’s stalking horse in the ridiculous “debates” so Trump didn’t have to do it himself. Now Vivek gets a cabinet position or similar and a chance to really prove himself.
They want to destroy conservatives, especially ones who have dark skin and make a lot of sense. This guy can throw eggs at Viveks house but you will never see him try to debate any issue with Vivek. Just name calling.
Vivek is a very articulate spokesman, with a sharp intellect and they need to dehumanize him and make him a joke before he slices them in two.
If true, that was smart strategy by Trump.
I don't see Trump doing something like that. He doesn't have Karl Rove or Dick Morris as his campaign manager.
Everyone I know likes Vivek. But as you said, we don’t need a clone when we can have the original. Still this isn’t about Trump, the man. It’s about surviving the Fourth turning or whatever you want to call this downturn.
I wouldn’t call it crashing and burning for someone getting 8% who almost no one had heard of before this primary season.
Predictable drivel from Chris Lehman. He may be disturbed to find Vivek on the ticket as VP some day soon.
IMHO Vivek was great -- except for that one part about not being a natural born citizen. A vote for Vivek is a vote for the most conservative sounding anchor baby in America that completely undermines a major immigration law change most conservatives want (remove the anchor baby practice).
Laughable. Vivek knew he wasn’t going to win. This was basically his introduction to MAGA voters. Most like what they saw and I think the Donald was impressed as well. I expect to see him in a cabinet position in the second Trump administration. He’s got a bright future.
I would argue that Ramaswamy did quite well, given that before throwing his hat into the ring, he was barely known outside of the community of conservative activists who read books. He outlasted contenders with far more name recognition and clout, including tycoons, big-city mayors, Senators, governors, and even a Vice President.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.