By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
“Are the Republicans going the way of the Whigs?”
During President Trump’s first term, this
question
was
asked
a lot.
The answer then: no.
But one year into his second term, it’s worth revisiting
the question, not so much because the answer is different this time, but
because the question illuminates how much our politics have changed in the last
decade.
Just in case you forgot—or never knew—the Whigs were one
of the two major American parties from the 1830s to the mid-1850s. We’ll return
to them in a moment.
A decade ago, the conversation about the Whigs centered
on the fact that Trump divided the GOP. Republican politicians—most notably
Sens. Mitch McConnell, John McCain, Mitt Romney, Jeff
Flake, and Bob Corker—would periodically defy or criticize the Trump White
House.
More relevant, members of the non-MAGA GOP establishment
in Congress, and in the White House itself, constrained Trump and often shaped
policy. For example, the 2017 tax reform was largely crafted and passed by GOP
congressional leaders and harsh
sanctions against Russia were pushed by members of the administration. In
short, Trump’s personality divided the right, but his policies, forged through
compromise between MAGA loyalists and traditional Republicans, unified them.
A year into the second Trump administration, things look
very different. Now his personality unifies the coalition, while issues divide
it.
This administration is monolithically MAGA—perhaps not
entirely in ideological terms, but certainly as a matter of personal and
political loyalty to Trump. The same largely holds for the broader network of
politicians, apparatchiks, and right-wing “influencers.”
Trump’s approval ratings among the broader public are
reaching historic
lows, but roughly
9 in 10 Republicans still approve of him. Pledging fealty and support for Trump
is a requirement in Republican primaries.
But on issues like trade,
Ukraine
and Israel,
abortion
and, to some extent, immigration—the
Republican coalition is fractured
like a cracked windshield. Some splits are generational—as with Israel and even
anti-Semitism. Other divisions are driven by new GOP voters Trump brought into
the coalition. A Manhattan Institute survey
published this month found that “new entrants” to the GOP are three times more
likely to believe in various conspiracy theories (34 percent) than traditional
ones (11 percent).
So, what does this have to do with the Whigs? For
starters, the Whig Party was formed to oppose a Trump-like president—Andrew
Jackson, aka “King Andrew the
First.” Opposition to Jackson’s “Caesarism” united a diverse coalition
under the Whig banner. When Jackson’s presidency ended and he faded away, the
glue holding the coalition together dissolved and issues divided the Whigs. I
say “issues,” but really it was just one issue: slavery.
Slavery divided the Whigs irreparably. So the Whigs died, and the newly minted
Republican Party took its place.
There’s a lesson here for both parties. When Jackson
dominated politics, he defined Democrats and Whigs alike. The Whigs tried to
paint Jackson’s successors as wannabe dictators, too. And Democrats wanted to transfer
Jackson’s cult of personality to his Democratic successors. Both sides failed.
Jackson’s polarizing qualities were unique to him.
The ongoing effort on the MAGA right to pre-coronate Vice
President J.D. Vance as the next MAGA avatar and GOP presidential nominee reeks
of the desperation that comes with the realization that Trump’s popularity,
like Jackson’s, is not naturally transferable either.
Indeed, claims by Vance notwithstanding,
Trump successfully remade the GOP by applying a singular “purity test”—loyalty
to Donald Trump. You can be an antisemite, isolationist, nativist—or not—in
Vance’s vision of a big tent, but you can’t be someone who doesn’t want them
inside the tent.
With Trump in the Oval Office, this argument has some
political power. Unlike his first term, support for Trump papers over deep
divisions on numerous issues. When he
goes the way of Andrew Jackson, those divisions will remain.
But just as important, opposition to Trump masks similar
divisions on the left.
Indeed, perhaps the single biggest division among
Democrats today is over the issue of whether the party’s leaders are
“resisting” Trump sufficiently.
There’s no single issue that divides Americans the way
slavery did in the 1850s—and that’s a good thing (unlike some MAGA
hotheads,
I’d like to avoid a civil war). Also, neither party is poised to go the way of
the Whigs, in part because the two-party duopoly over election laws and ballot
access is a huge barrier to entry for third parties.
But, at the end of 2025, the current coalitions of both
parties look too fragile to survive the post-Trump era intact.
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