By Mark Antonio Wright
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Donald Trump’s hostile takeover of the Republican party
is underway. The Trump Train has left the station, destination: the White
House. The Donald has a head of steam and is headed toward the goal line,
stiff-arming metaphors all the way.
Will anyone tackle him? Can the train be derailed? Will
conservatives resist the takeover of their party by a clown who — as a Hillary
supporter told me three days ago, cackling with delight — is a lifelong Democrat?
As it stands, there are only two men in America who can
take on Trump and defeat him: Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio. The two senators
clearly don’t like each other. Each thinks that if only the other guy would
drop out of the race, a conservative coalition would consolidate in time to top
Trump. Each hopes that some outside bazooka of money will open up on Trump to
take him down a notch or two. Wrong, wrong, all wrong. If either Rubio or Cruz
is going to defeat Trump, the turnaround will begin tonight at the GOP debate
in Houston.
If Rubio or Cruz can’t lock horns with Donald Trump and
best him Thursday night in the political gong show that we call a debate, then
it’s not going to happen. If Marco Rubio can’t stand up to Donald Trump’s
juvenile insults and turn the tables, then Rubio isn’t tough or ruthless enough
to be president of the United States. If Ted Cruz can’t use his lawyerly skills
to mercilessly shred Donald Trump’s equivocations and half-truths and
flip-flops, then Cruz isn’t strong or canny enough to be president of the
United States. If these guys can’t sense the urgency of the moment and rise to
the challenge by bringing down Trump, they have no business asking for
conservatives’ votes or leading America in a dark and dangerous moment on the
world stage.
These two want to be the guy who answers the 3 a.m. phone
call.
Tonight is the 3 a.m. phone call.
Tonight’s debate is the last chance to give the Trump
steamroller a flat tire. If Trump leaves Houston unscathed, if he moves on to
the Super Tuesday states and wins all or most of them — then the race is over.
All our lives we have been told that the candidate with
momentum is the one to watch. All our lives we’ve been told that “Big Mo” is
more important than endorsements or coffers full of campaign cash. All our
lives we’ve been told that in politics — as in life — people follow a winner.
And now Rubio and Cruz (not to mention Ben Carson and John Kasich, whose vanity
campaigns are proving them more interested in keeping their names in the papers
than in saving the conservative movement and the country) are telling us that a
nuance-laden, slow-burn, smart-guy strategy will do the trick?
It won’t. This is a time for choosing. A time for
strength. A time for ruthlessness and killer instinct. A time for mettle and
resolve and the will to go to war.
The Republican party is infected with a virus, and that
virus can be expunged only by direct action. Donald Trump isn’t going to go
away. He’s not going to say anything stupid enough to deter his legions. The
magical unicorns of “political gravity” aren’t going to save the Republican
party from nominating a man who is antithetical to everything the party has
stood for since Barry Goldwater won the nomination in 1964. He has to be
defeated. He has to exposed. He has to be humiliated on national TV in front of
25 million people.
How should Cruz and Rubio go after Trump? They must
depict Trump as a game-show host out of his depth. They must laugh at his
kindergarten-level grasp of national-security policy. They should bait him into
putting forth an opinion on Obamacare and then mock him for having held the
opposite view that morning on Morning Joe.
They should pound him on his four bankruptcies, ridicule his failed Trump
University scam that stole tens of thousands of dollars from average Americans,
call him on his support for Planned Parenthood, knock him for his bullying,
vulgar self-righteousness, laugh at him for not knowing what the nuclear triad
is, and guffaw at his inept attempt to revitalize Atlantic City. And when Trump
loses his cool, they should do it again and again. And again. Cruz and Rubio
must mock Trump until the audience views him as the deranged half-wit that he
is.
Donald Trump must be shown to be a loser.
Politely pointing out that Donald Trump isn’t a
conservative isn’t going to be enough. Trump has to be shown to be ridiculous.
And Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio (or both) has to be the one
to do it.
If they don’t, then the Republican nomination process is
over. And the two senators will have no one to blame but themselves.
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