By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
As things stand, Donald Trump is the presumptive GOP
nominee. That’s awful news, and depressing to contemplate. But terrible
possibilities don’t become less terrible if we refuse to contemplate them.
Rather, they become more likely.
The GOP’s collective desire to look away has been a
problem for months. Nearly everyone, including yours truly, believed that
Trump’s candidacy would exhaust itself on its own terms. There are many reasons
why that hasn’t happened. Chief among them: Too many people thought it was
someone else’s job to bell the Trumpian cat. No better evidence for this can be
found than the fact that of the $215 million spent by super PACs so far this
cycle, only 4 percent was spent attacking Trump, according to the Washington Post.
While a queue for allotments of blame would be longer
than a Great Depression breadline, the person at the head of it is Ted Cruz.
For months, Cruz embraced Trump as a comrade-in-arms. This helped send the
signal to talk radio hosts and various conservative activists that Trump was a
healthy addition to the political conversation. Even though the two men are
wildly divergent ideologically, they both found shelter under the
“anti-establishment” umbrella.
Cruz finally broke the clinch in Iowa and demonstrated
that negative attacks on Trump work.
But then, disastrously, Cruz stopped attacking. He
wrongly reasoned that he had no chance in New Hampshire and had little to gain,
so why bother fighting Trump there? For the entire crucial week leading up to
the New Hampshire primary, the GOP field went back into a cannibalistic frenzy
to win the non-Trump mantle. This allowed Trump to run up a huge victory in the
Granite State, and that momentum let him gobble up Cruz’s evangelical base in
South Carolina (where 73 percent of voters describe themselves as evangelical
or born-again), resulting in a strategically devastating third-place finish
that shattered Cruz’s claim to be the standard-bearer of true conservatism.
The morals of this story so far should be familiar.
First, you can’t count on politicians to look beyond their immediate tactical
self-interest. Second, rumors of the so-called establishment’s power — or even
existence — are greatly exaggerated. Waiting for “the establishment” to save
the party from Trump’s hostile takeover is like waiting for Godot to bring the
beer to the party.
Marco Rubio is now the only plausible alternative to
Trump. But it’s unclear whether he’s taken either of these lessons to heart.
According to his campaign’s post–South Carolina strategy memo, he thinks he can
wait until after Super Tuesday to post a win in any state. Rubio assumes
first-place finishes will ultimately come his way because the field will be
clear. Will it? Jeb Bush is finally out, but Ben Carson seems to be running one
of the most ingeniously disguised book tours in modern memory. John Kasich is
hunting windmills in Ohio and Michigan, in the apparent hope that he can parlay
such victories into being Trump’s running mate. And Cruz is unlikely to stop
running for president because that’s all he knows how to do.
Rubio’s strategy isn’t crazy, just implausible. If he’s
hoping the “establishment” can rescue him, or that attacking everyone but Trump
is the route to victory, he should take a moment to review how the primaries
became such a raging garbage fire in the first place.
Is there another way? One possibility would be for Rubio
and Cruz to cut a deal. Republican disarray is largely attributable to the fact
that no so-called “establishment candidate” secured much support from the
conservative grass roots, and no grass-roots candidate secured much support
from the establishment.
If the two factions — which make up the overwhelming
majority of Republican voters — could be unified, it might be enough to stop
Trump.
What would the deal look like? A Rubio–Cruz ticket. Cruz
won’t work at the top of the ticket for the simple reason that too many GOP
quislings fear Cruz more than Trump. But a unity ticket — a la Reagan–Bush in
1980 — in the form of Los Hermanos Cubanos might just do the trick. There are
real costs to such a deal (not least the fact that there are better
general-election running mates for Rubio).
Maybe there’s another way, but I haven’t heard it. And in
a race where Trump has changed everything with his boldness, it’s long past
time for his opponents to provide some of their own.
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