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Trump -- Once and Future King?
Townhall.com ^ | February 26, 2021 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 02/26/2021 4:43:09 AM PST by Kaslin


Source: Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead

"I don't know if he'll run in 2024 or not. But if he does, I'm pretty sure he will win the nomination."

So says Mitt Romney, the sole Republican senator to have voted twice to convict President Donald J. Trump of impeachable acts.

But is it possible Trump could win the nomination in 2024?

What does history teach us about Republican presidents who, after losing the White House, come back to win it again?

Well, to be frank, there is no such history.

Consider. Four Republican presidents in the 20th century were defeated while seeking a second term. None was nominated again.

William Howard Taft lost the White House to Woodrow Wilson in 1912, and even ran behind the third-party "Bull Moose" candidate, ex-President Theodore Roosevelt. Taft never ran again but went on to serve as chief justice of the United States.

Ex-President Teddy Roosevelt was considering running again in 1920 but died at 60 in January of 1919 at Sagamore Hill.

After President Herbert Hoover lost to FDR in 1932, he never ran again.

Gerald Ford, serving out Nixon's second term, lost to Jimmy Carter in 1976 and packed it in for good, as did President Carter after losing to Ronald Regan in 1980.

George H. W. Bush lost the White House in 1992 and retired from electoral politics, never to run again.

As for Trump running in 2024 and winning the GOP nomination, he does hold high cards no other ex-president held, except perhaps Roosevelt.

Trump has a vast and loyal following. Currently three-fourths of all Republicans see him as their leader. He won 74 million votes, the highest total ever for a sitting president or a losing presidential candidate.

Their loyalty is traceable to what Trump achieved, whom and how he fought, and the new issues he introduced and has become indelibly associated. Foremost among these is his struggle to secure the Southern border against endless illegal migrant crossings.

Unrestricted immigration from the South, the Third Worldization of America, is the true existential threat "climate change" purports to be.

Trump also succeeded in enacting the traditional GOP platform of low taxes and deregulation, producing record-low unemployment -- before the pandemic hit in March 2020.

His record of elevating strict constructionists, constitutionalists and conservatives to the federal courts, and three Supreme Court seats, is unrivaled in the history of the modern Republican Party.

Trump also forged a bond with Middle America by taking on a media whose treatment of him was remorselessly hateful and hostile. "We love him for the enemies he has made," it was said of Grover Cleveland.

He brought a new and unique agenda to the GOP.

He replaced a free trade globalist ideology with nationalism. He set out to rebuild America's depleted manufacturing base and restore her economic independence. Under Trump, the slogan "America First" came to represent a new foreign policy where rich and prosperous allies carried more of the burden of their own and the common defense.

He wanted Americans to do their nation-building here in the USA.

While Beltway Russophobes prevented Trump from achieving the rapprochement he wanted, and he failed to extricate us from the forever wars of the Middle East, he did drawdown U.S. forces in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, and keep us out of an all-out war with Iran.

There is thus a specific Trumpian agenda, with which he is alone associated, that is becoming the issues agenda of the conservative movement and the party base, if not the party elites.

Yet, the drawbacks to a Trump nomination remain major.

He did, after all, lose in 2020. And he has been damaged by the months-long battle since to prove that Biden was the beneficiary of a stolen election. The Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol by MAGA militants was blamed on Trump and became the article of his second impeachment where every Democratic senator and six Republicans voted to convict him. And even some of those who voted to acquit, like Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, declared him guilty of inciting the mob.Moreover, Trump faces a blizzard of legal challenges and charges that will damage his reputation, his businesses and him, personally.

In 2024, Trump will turn 78, the age Joe Biden is today. And between now and 2024, there is sure to be considerable attrition in support among the 74 million who voted for Trump.

But if Romney is right and Trump has the kind of strength that could make him the nominee in 2024, that strength will surely be sufficient to veto or sink any potential nominee who does not have the former president's blessing.

And, from seeing both candidates of 2020 up close in recent weeks and months, does not Trump appear more likely to be the Republican leader of his party than does slow-moving "Sleepy Joe" look like the Democratic nominee 44 months from now?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2024election; presdonaldtrump; republicanparty
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1 posted on 02/26/2021 4:43:09 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Not a mere king...


2 posted on 02/26/2021 4:46:21 AM PST by COBOL2Java (Republicans are the court jesters in the kingdom of liberalism)
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To: COBOL2Java

Wow


3 posted on 02/26/2021 4:47:30 AM PST by Kaslin (Joe Biden will never be my President, and neither will Kamala Harris)
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To: COBOL2Java

I’m sorry but this looks scary and weird.


4 posted on 02/26/2021 4:49:46 AM PST by Kaslin (Joe Biden will never be my President, and neither will Kamala Harris)
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To: Kaslin
It was part of a parade in Italy
5 posted on 02/26/2021 4:51:58 AM PST by COBOL2Java (Republicans are the court jesters in the kingdom of liberalism)
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To: Kaslin

“He did, after all, lose in 2020.”

Yes, definitely, the senile old bumbling idiot who could not draw over twenty-five people at any event during the campaign won 80 million votes, the greatest turn-out in the nation’s history?

Buchanan, who for decades was worth reading, is no longer.


6 posted on 02/26/2021 4:52:38 AM PST by odawg
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To: Kaslin

Your right. Its a tiny bit too much.


7 posted on 02/26/2021 4:56:41 AM PST by HighSierra5
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To: Kaslin

“There is thus a specific Trumpian agenda, with which he is alone associated”

The next two years are huge. Unfortunately, it will be difficult to build a modern movement without media outlets. That must be addressed.


8 posted on 02/26/2021 4:57:48 AM PST by cdcdawg (“we have to bring these people in.”)
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To: COBOL2Java

I don’t think this forum is made up of the demographic for Warhammer 40k memes. Their grandchildren are another story.


9 posted on 02/26/2021 5:00:41 AM PST by cdcdawg (“we have to bring these people in.”)
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To: Kaslin

Once again, Buchanan writes an article that only regurgitates the conventional wisdom of the day without adding a new perspective.


10 posted on 02/26/2021 5:04:59 AM PST by Avalon Memories (I will only ever refer to Biden by his new nickname...Asterisk. )
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To: Kaslin

Trump has to remain very active and continue taking the fight to the Media-Dem Party. Speeches, huge rallies, and the like will help retain most of his power. If he lays low there will be a serious erosion of support from the 74 MILLION who voted for him, that’s just the way it goes, 4 years is a long time.


11 posted on 02/26/2021 5:09:12 AM PST by euram
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To: Kaslin

I think its more like he was Gandalf the Grey returning as Gandalf the White


12 posted on 02/26/2021 5:13:59 AM PST by MomwithHope (Forever grateful to all our patriots, past, present and future.)
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To: Kaslin

pierre delecto said wut?


13 posted on 02/26/2021 5:15:21 AM PST by PGalt (past peak civilization?)
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To: Kaslin

Our King over the water.


14 posted on 02/26/2021 5:16:55 AM PST by Jim Noble (In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act)
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To: Kaslin

Pat cleverly limits his sample to 20th century Republicans in order to exclude Grover Cleveland.


15 posted on 02/26/2021 5:24:35 AM PST by Lisbon1940 (No full-term Governors (at the time of election))
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To: cdcdawg; COBOL2Java
The initial thread on the float got 48 comments.

This video from the parade in Italy with the Sabaton soundtrack is also over-the-top but is fantastic.

The thing is, the float was supposed to mock Trump, but it was an epic fail.

France: we will give you this statue, America.
Italy: hold my beer.


16 posted on 02/26/2021 5:42:12 AM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s^2)
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To: DoodleBob

That is one YUGE meme!


17 posted on 02/26/2021 5:43:32 AM PST by cdcdawg (“we have to bring these people in.”)
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To: Kaslin
Consider. Four Republican presidents in the 20th century were defeated while seeking a second term. None was nominated again.

Three didn't try and the fourth ran third party.

18 posted on 02/26/2021 5:43:37 AM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: cdcdawg
I would love to buy that float and drive it through Beverly Hills and park it in front of the Grammy Awards Red Carpet.

Then I'll drive to JimRob's office complex in Fresno and cement it out front, surrounded by barbed wire.

19 posted on 02/26/2021 5:47:35 AM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s^2)
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To: Lisbon1940
Grover Cleveland, of course, was a Democrat. In fact he was the first Democrat to win since the Civil War.

I had a great-uncle born in 1885 whose middle name was Cleveland. His father (too young to fight in the Civil War but the son of a Confederate veteran) was obviously a Democrat.

20 posted on 02/26/2021 6:28:50 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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