By Andrew C. McCarthy
Saturday, April 30, 2016
I wonder when the Trump backers will realize they’ve been
had.
The 2016 GOP campaign has been overwhelmed by Donald
Trump’s celebrity persona, by the can’t-take-your-eyes-off-it appearances where
he might say or do anything — and “anything” includes expletives, incitements,
and assorted idiocies that would have been disqualifying in the bygone times
of, oh, five or ten minutes ago. But Trump is not the real story of the
campaign. The real story is the Republican base’s rejection of the Republican
establishment — i.e., the party leaders, prominent pols, lobbyists, and donors
who make up the GOP component of the Washington ruling class.
It is, we’re told, an “insurgent election.” In the media
narrative, which swallows whole Trump’s self-portrait, the “outsider”
real-estate mogul’s ongoing clash with Senator Ted Cruz is the ultimate
showdown of “Insurgent v. Insurgent.”
Alas, if you buy this storyline, you’re apt to miss a
couple of things.
The first is that no one else is left. As we focus on the
pitched battle between the two remaining candidates, it is easy to overlook
that all the insiders’ preferred candidates have been swept aside — unless you
count the vanity crusade of John Kasich (which I don’t, except as a subsidiary
of the Trump campaign).
To stride in what the media once touted as “the
establishment lane” was to walk the plank. Establishment candidates were cast
aside by three-quarters of the party’s base, erstwhile supporters whom GOP
leadership either misread or haughtily dismissed. It turns out those voters
weren’t kidding: They really did want a stop put to the damage the Obama Left
is doing to the country. They are ballistic at a party that promises to fight
when campaigning but, once elected, preemptively surrenders under the guise of “showing
we can govern” and “making Washington work.”
So one by one, as the primaries unfolded, the bipartisan
moderates faded away — Bush, Graham, Christie, et al. Even Marco Rubio, an
immensely talented conservative, was undone by the taint of supporting amnesty
for illegal aliens under the banner of “immigration reform,” the signal issue
dividing the establishment from the base.
The second thing missing from the “Insurgent v.
Insurgent” storyline is: We’re one insurgent short.
Donald Trump is the Washington establishment. The fact
that he has not previously held public office does not make him an “outsider.”
Hell, Reince Priebus — the head of the Republican National Committee — has
never held public office. If the ruling class were just the officeholders, it
would be short-lived. The Donald Trumps who pay the freight are the Washington
establishment’s lifeblood. They are joined to the officeholders at the hip . .
. or hadn’t you noticed Governor Christie shadowing The Donald?
When Trump leans Republican, he leans with the
Republicans who play ball with Democrats. It is Democrats, predominantly, who
have been lavished with Trump’s material and moral support over the decades.
There is plenty of room at the Trump trough, though, for the kind of Republicans
that primary voters thought they had deep-sixed.
Take John Boehner, former House speaker, GOP
establishment pillar . . . and longtime Trump golf pal.
When last seen, in his Capitol Hill swan song, Boehner
was courting Democrats and slamming through a budget that forfeited all
Republican leverage against Obama. But with Trump kicking off his California
campaign this week, there was Boehner, thrilling the campus Left at Stanford
University with snipes at Ted Cruz. The Texas senator is “Lucifer in the flesh,”
chortled the former speaker, and “a more miserable son of a bitch” than anyone
with whom Boehner had worked in his entire life.
Remember: Boehner spent the last decade working with
Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid. Yet, it’s Ted Cruz he can’t abide.
As it happens, Cruz and Boehner barely know each other.
They overlapped in Washington for a little over one congressional term, in
different chambers. They’ve exchanged few words (none of them cross,
apparently) in the few times they’ve spoken, and they’ve never worked together
— at least not directly. Cruz, however, is a principled conservative, who
fought Obamacare to the bitter end; Boehner brought about the bitter end by
pushing to fund Obamacare while pretending to oppose it. That experience is
enough for Boehner to spew his bile and count himself as #NeverCruz . . .
though he’d gladly vote for Trump, with whom he bragged of being “texting
buddies.”
Want to know why Obamacare is fully funded? Why the
meager spending caps enacted in 2011 were busted? Why the debt limit was
suspended so Washington could zoom past its $18 trillion credit line? Why
Obama’s lawless executive order granting de facto amnesty to illegal aliens is
proceeding apace? Why Obama is emptying Guantanamo Bay and planning to transfer
detainees into the United States? Why the EPA continues to implement Obama’s
climate-change agenda despite a Supreme Court stay of its anti-coal regulation?
Why no official was impeached and no funding was slashed when the IRS was used
as a political weapon against conservative groups? Why the Justice Department
has a $27 billion budget that pays for its paralyzing investigations of the
nation’s police departments while the attorney general threatens new legal
action against climate-change “deniers” and “anti-Muslim” speech?
Thank John Boehner. To fight Obama on these and other
progressive priorities would have required exploiting Congress’s constitutional
authority, particularly the power of the purse. Boehner and other GOP leaders
were given this power because voters believed their promises to fight. Empty
promises.
While Boehner was surrendering, Donald Trump was backing
him to the hilt: a staggering $100,000 contribution to the Congressional
Leadership Fund — Boehner’s super PAC, formed largely to fend off conservative
primary challenges against GOP establishment loyalists. It should be easy to
remember that number, $100,000. It is the same amount Trump gave to the Clinton
Foundation. That’s even more than the $60,000 Trump gave to Kentuckians for
Strong Leadership, the super PAC of Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell
(along with a $5,200 contribution to McConnell’s reelection campaign). It was
McConnell, of course, who handled the Senate end of the budget surrender that
Obama praised for reflecting “our values” — meaning two years of his values,
paid in full by the GOP-controlled Congress.
Remarkably, Trump has managed to separate himself from
the political establishment that he has been underwriting for years by
rhetorically attacking Washington’s infatuation with illegal aliens. It’s a
feint: Trump is actually laying the groundwork for Washington’s panacea,
amnesty.
Understandably furious at GOP leaders, Trump fans swoon
to the charlatan promise of a fortress wall that will never be built, much less
paid for by Mexico. Meanwhile, it doesn’t seem to register with these voters
that Trump is promising to give legal
status to millions of illegal aliens after temporarily deporting them.
If we had a responsible media, this would surprise no
one. In just the last three years, Trump has tweeted in apparent support of the
Gang of Eight immigration bill (the same one that advocacy for which killed
Rubio’s campaign) and has urged giving illegal aliens a “path” to legal status
— and Trump was willing to grant this “path” under the express but exaggerated
assumption that the illegal-alien population was 30 million (it is more likely 11 million, nearly three times less).
Moreover, in 2012, Trump described as “maniacal” and
“crazy” a proposal to enforce the immigration laws in a manner that
incentivizes illegal aliens to “self-deport.” Yes, only four years ago, the guy
who now says he’d round them all up and deport them was complaining that merely
pressuring illegal aliens to leave on their own was too “mean-spirited.”
Obviously, it would make no sense, and there is not
nearly enough money, to kick 11 million people out of the country just so you
can usher them back into the country, duly minted as legal immigrants. So take
this to the bank: If Trump were elected president, there would not be the mass
deportations his followers crave; he would skip that step and move on to the
amnesty they abhor.
Trump is the Washington establishment, the very embodiment
of its progressive pieties, cloaked in tough-guy bravado. It is thus an amazing
thing to behold: In our “insurgent election,” voters are so incensed at
Republican-party leaders that if John Boehner and Mitch McConnell had run for
president, they’d have gotten even less support than Chris Christie, who failed
to win a single delegate despite $31 million spent on his candidacy. Yet
millions of those voters have been taken in by Donald Trump, who funds the
establishment they tell us they despise and would press the agenda that has
driven them from the GOP.
When will they realize they’ve been had?
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