By Michael Brendan Dougherty
Tuesday, November 06, 2018
The post-Kavanaugh moment of Republican unity, where
MAGA-hat wearers and think tankers in loafers both cheered Susan Collins in
defense of Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, seems like it was a long time ago.
What does it mean to vote Republican today? I don’t think anyone knows for
certain, and that’s one of the problems the party faces as it goes to the
voters.
Some of my colleagues and peers just accept that there is
Trump and then there is your local Republican. “I evaluate the individual whose
name is on the ballot, not the president who isn’t yet up for reelection,”
writes David French. In its election editorial the Washington Examiner confidently declares that “real conservatives
will vote Republican,” even though “there can be reasonable debate over whether
a conservative ought to vote for Trump, either in 2016 or in 2020.” (It also
notes “a few places where there is a decent case to be made that conservatives
should not support Republican candidates.”)
On the other side, my longtime friend Daniel McCarthy
writes in the New York Times that
there is no going back: The party belongs to Donald Trump the way it once
belonged to Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. The winning coalition for
Republicans is necessarily larger than dedicated conservatives, and includes a
nationalist element. Trump has rebuilt the formula that gave Nixon and Reagan
landslides, he argues.
Of course, Trump’s party is hemorrhaging voters,
congressmen, and potentially governors in the states where Trump scored an
upset. Anticipating the potential fallout for the GOP in Congress, McCarthy
concludes by blaming Republican House candidates for incomprehension of the
political moment: “Few Republicans running this year seem to understand what
gave Mr. Trump his edge in 2016 — it was not that he was simply combative and
rhetorically right-wing. It was that he had a vision of what it meant to make
American great again, by making the Republicans a party for the nation again.”
But Trump himself won a squeaker of an election. His
coalition may have similarities to Reagan’s, and it may be well-distributed to
grant an Electoral College victory against an unpopular Democrat, but it’s far
from clear what else it can accomplish — and for the time being, it is
shrinking.
Right now the Republican party is neither fish nor fowl.
Trump won while promising to make a “worker’s party” that “took care of
everyone.” He won election while demonstrating his freedom from the old party orthodoxies,
calling out true conservatives such as “Lyin’ Ted” Cruz. But over time he has
come to depend on congressional Republicans, and they have restrained him,
preserving the GOP from full Trumpian revision. Last year’s tax bill cut taxes
far more severely for corporations than for the typical American, leaving Trump
to make a last minute pre-election promise of a middle-class follow-up. And
Trump rechristened the senator from Texas as “Beautiful Ted.” There was no
major infrastructure bill, no wall. The revisions to trade agreements have been
gathering pace, but their effect will not be known for years. Trump has limited
the possibility of the GOP becoming a party for “working families” by focusing
almost exclusively on the trade needs of agricultural and Rust Belt whites,
rather than on making work more rewarding for people of all races.
And so Republicans have this alarming dynamic where Trump
is alienating suburban woman, college graduates, and young people generally,
while congressional Republicans and their agenda are repelling the tranches of
voters Trump brought into the party. The relationship between the the president
and the Senate works for appointing judges. But Trump and the House Republicans
could never square their contrary desires on health care with the wants of any
group of voters, and so they abandoned the project.
At a zenith of power, this party is having an identity
crisis. The congressional GOP and the traditional GOP donor class never wanted
working-class whites or their agenda. Refusing to serve the voters you have is
a recipe for disaster.
The Republican party needs a figure who can reconcile and
unite its traditional voters with its Trumpian newer voters and expand from
there. It doesn’t have that in Trump. It doesn’t have an innovative new House
leader waiting in the wings to replace Paul Ryan, either. Until it finds that
figure, expect the party to decline.
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