Posted on 11/25/2015 7:58:05 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
The contours of the outsider-as-favorite Republican primary began to take shape this summer, when the candidates without establishment support, led by Donald Trump, consolidated half of the vote in national polls.
The news for GOP elites has grown consistently worse since then. And only now, as those contours stretch far enough to squeeze the establishment entirely out of contention, are the party faithful emerging from their state of Trump denial. Theyâre beginning to reckon publicly with the calamity of this campaign, and are grasping to reassert control over the process. The only questions now are whether theyâre too late, and whether they can defeat Trumpism without acknowledging and atoning for their complicity in his ascent.
A few months ago, Trump and his fellow outsiders were a clear threat to the party, but it took several of themâTrump, Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, Carly Fiorinaâto amass 50 percent support, with Trump contributing the lionâs share.
Today, they eclipse it easily. In some early-state polls, Trump and Ted Cruz alone enjoy the support of more than half of all likely voters, while the outsiders combined enjoy the support of more than two thirds of all respondents.
This presents the GOP with a new nightmare scenario. Earlier in the year, Republicans could take solace in the likelihood that the field of elected officials would winnow and that the party would coalesce around a single alternative to the insurgents as it did in 2008 and 2012. They were sure it would come down to a frontrunner against two or three formidable conservative challengers who were splitting the activist vote among themselves.
That winnowing hasnât happened. And now, if and when it does, itâs conceivable that the combined forces of the party will only be able to marshal about one-third or less of the overall voteânot enough to guarantee victory even if Trump and Cruz battle it out beyond Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina. And even that assumes supporters of candidates like Mike Huckabee and Chris Christie donât defect to Cruz or Trump instead of Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush.
Whether motivated by this particular analysis or not, party elites are snapping to attention. John Kasichâs SuperPAC is promising a multi-million-dollar anti-Trump blitz. A more concerted effort, spearheaded by GOP operative Liz Mair, is called Trump Card LLC, and operates on the premise that âunless something dramatic and unconventional is done, Trump will be the Republican nominee and Hillary Clinton will become president.â
Prominent surrogates for leading candidates have embraced the notion, first propounded by liberals, that Trump is a âfascist.â But the principals they back wonât go near the term. Some, like Rubio and Cruz, wonât criticize Trump at all, and Cruz in particular is a Trump sycophantââa big fan.â Which raises the question of whether a party that enables Trump and Trumpism can effectively root out either.
Michael Gerson, a former George W. Bush aide who now writes an opinion column for the Washington Post, acknowledged that âTrump has, so far, set the terms of the primary debate and dragged other candidates in the direction of ethnic and religious exclusion. One effect has been the legitimization of even more extreme viewsâsignaling that it is okay to give voice to sentiments and attitudes that, in previous times, people would have been too embarrassed to share in public.â
With the denial fading, Gerson asks, âIs it possible, and morally permissible, for economic and foreign policy conservatives, and for Republicans motivated by their faith, to share a coalition with the advocates of an increasingly raw and repugnant nativism?â
The answer appears to be âyes.â As much as they want Trump vanquished, the problem for the other Republicans in the field is that theyâve all pledged to back the GOP nominee, no matter who wins. John McCain, a man of the party who nevertheless agreed to place Sarah Palin in line for the presidency, says he will support Trump if faced with a choice between Trump and Hillary Clinton.
Thatâs not the Breitbart crew talking. Itâs the RNC, the entire primary field, and one of the partyâs most recent presidential nominees. Which is why when writers like National Reviewâs Kevin Williamson lay the blame for Trumpâs ascent at the feet of conservative movement jesters Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh, and shrug that nothing can be doneââas a matter of culture, Trump isâunhappilyâright where a great many conservatives are: angry, sputtering, lashing out. Trump may not last; Trumpism will.ââit rings hollow.
As much as theyâve awakened to the threat that Trumpism poses to their party, Republicans and the conservative intelligentsia lack the self-awarenessâor perhaps the temerityâto acknowledge that though they now resent it, theyâve been courting it all along.
I forget -- how did that work out?
Same as all the Saloon and Nation crap that gets posted, just ignore it, life is too short to waste on liberal drool.
If Trump gets the nomination, Bill Kluless Kristol says he was a 3rd party candidate. A new party, Common Core, led By Jebby??
If Trump gets the nomination, Bill Kluless Kristol says he was a 3rd party candidate. A new party, Common Core, led By Jebby??
Trump is unlike anything the brain dead Political pundits have ever seen. He should have been knocked out weeks ago by his brash mis-speaks. But he is more like Andy Jackson was in the early 19th Century. Popular, a real leader. They better get out of the way before the Trumptidalwave sweeps them away. Watch as they use some trick to keep him from the nomination. If they do that—the electorate should go into rebellion and go 3rd Party. The GOP should ceast being a party.
We own this party now. It is TRUMP’S PARTY. Get on the train or stand on the tracks!!
Did anybody see “SURGING” Carley’s numbers tonight? “3 %”. Want to mess with Trump? Bring it baby.
Exactly the comparison I would make! Makes me wonder if ol Hickory was warned “You can’t just remove all those Indians!”
the premise that unless something dramatic and unconventional is done, Trump will be the Republican nominee and Hillary Clinton will become president
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Trump getting elected worries them more than Hillary getting elected.
I suspect The Cheap Labor Express and its minions in the RNC/GOP will back Hillary if Trump is nominated.
I’ve not been able to find a record(ing) of it, however, I recall watching Dede Myers (ex Clinton press sec) on one of the (I believe Sunday) talks shows where she said (para)
... Einstein said the definition of insanity is trying the same thing over and over, it’s taken the democrats 50 years to get universal health care and they’ve finally done it..
Ignore if you want to, the dem/liberal/socialist/communist/progressive anti Americans don’t.
I have NO IDEA what they want for a country, nor do I think do they.
Perhaps they’re building upon Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart’s definition of pornography...
...they’ll know it when they see it.
Similar to their to definition of taxes.
This guy, this ‘senior editor’ of who the hell knows what, is a disgusting pile of crap.
f Trump gets the nomination, Bill Kluless Kristol says he was a 3rd party candidate. A new party, Common Core, led By Jebby??>>>>
i don’t understand your post
Bill Kristol said he would start a 3rd party and run one of the GOPe if Trump got the nomination ( probably he means Bush or Kasich)
“Bill Kristol said he would start a 3rd party and run one of the GOPe if Trump got the nomination”
Which, by the way, can only mean ONE THING - that they know TRUMP CAN WIN...although they keep saying they don’t want him as the nominee because they claim he CANNOT WIN.
They’re playing us.
Fred Barnes is almost as bad, so I wonder how many “Weekly Standard” subscribers are canceling because of Kristol and Barnes?
Yea, I remember how they used to be with us. But once OPEN BORDERS came their way and the donors then DEMANDED IT, it’s like they’re from a different world.
Just sickening.
I remember hearing Trump say that Ann Coulter’s book helped him refine his views on Immigration. If Trump makes Ann Press Secretary, those daily briefings are going to be so dsmn entertaining.
Trump presents the GOP with a doomsday scenario - a candidate with the charisma and name recognition to win who doesn’t need their money and could care less what they think.
Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. The stages of grief.
I think the GOPe is in the anger stage already!
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