By Jonah Goldberg
Friday, October 23, 2015
Most of the politically savvy people I know are still
confident that Donald Trump will not be the Republican nominee for president.
Some are even dismissive. They tell me that his poll
numbers are a statistical mirage because they count too many people who will
not actually vote in Republican primaries or caucuses. They point to historical
trends that always show “outsiders” doing well early in the process, only to
underperform when voters take their responsibilities more seriously. Just this
week, they cite the fact that Ben Carson is now way out in front of Trump in
Iowa, according to the Quinnipiac poll.
Mike Murphy, the head of the pro–Jeb Bush super PAC Right
to Rise USA, told Bloomberg News this week that Trump is a “false zombie
front-runner” because he can never be elected and therefore can’t be a real
front-runner. I’m not sure I get this logic. Arguably, Barry Goldwater couldn’t
get elected in 1964. That doesn’t mean he was never the front-runner, does it?
Regardless, I hope the Trump doubters are right. Even
though they — and I — have been wrong on so much about his performance so far.
And that is what makes me less certain. By any of the
standards and rules that defined the last 40 years of American politics,
Trump’s candidacy should have imploded as a joke a long time ago. That simply
has not happened. He’s been the front-runner for a long time, over three
months.
My Trump-skeptic friends point to the fact that Rudy
Giuliani was ahead in the polls for eleven months, from February 2007 to
January 2008, according to the RealClearPolitics
average of polls (though the Washington
Examiner’s Byron York notes he was the front-runner even longer in other
polls; the RCP average only began in February of 2007). Giuliani never won a
single primary and was out of the race when his all-in-for-Florida strategy
blew up in his face.
Others say the better analogy is to Howard Dean, who was
the longtime Democratic front-runner in 2004, running an “outsider” campaign
against his own party’s establishment. He looked invincible right up until the
moment he was vinced in Iowa.
The problem with all of these analogies, it seems to me,
is that they are comparing apples and oranges. Giuliani, Dean, and all the
other outsiders who failed to close the deal were constrained by those rules
and standards of politics I referred to earlier. They had to avoid gaffes. They
had to demonstrate they were knowledgeable about the issues. They couldn’t
flip-flop — often mid-sentence — the way Trump can with carefree abandon. If
they hurled childish insults at opponents and critics, it would have cost them
dearly.
Meanwhile, Trump keeps on a’Trumping, flouting those
constraints. His unfavorable numbers have actually come down in the process.
It’s a clichĂ© to say he’s defying the laws of political gravity, but it’s true.
He respects only the laws of entertainment gravity.
And those laws may ultimately prove his undoing.
Eventually, his shtick could get old, even for his fans. There are signs that
this is happening. But there are also signs that he’s improving as a candidate.
His interviews are getting sharper and less manic. Earlier this month,
reporters kept asking Trump what it would take for him to drop out of the race.
It seems to me what they were really asking was, “When will things get back to
normal?”
The hard truth: They just might not get back to normal.
But let’s assume the skeptics are right and Trump
eventually goes away. What then? To listen to some of the consultants and
graybeards, all will be right with the world. They will say, “See, you freaked
out over Trump for nothing.” That strikes me as exactly the wrong response.
Whether or not Trump is a flash in the pan, what worries me is what his
candidacy says about the pan. If you survive a heart attack, that doesn’t mean
you should go back to the diet and lifestyle that gave you the heart attack in
the first place.
Whether or not he gets the nomination, Trump should be
seen as a wake-up call. His entirely cynical exploitation of immigration —
Trump criticized Mitt Romney in 2012 for being too harsh on immigration —
tapped into an entirely sincere dissatisfaction with the status quo. His
brilliant leveraging of his celebrity for political gain reveals much about the
calcified state of American politics. Trump may fade away, but the forces
driving Trumpism are more enduring and must be taken seriously.
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