By Rich Lowry
Friday, July 31, 2020
‘Burn it down” is rarely a wise or prudent sentiment.
A cadre of Republican opponents of President Donald Trump
is nonetheless calling for a purifying fire to sweep through the GOP in the
fall, taking down not just Trump but as many Republican officeholders as
possible.
Only this willy-nilly bloodletting will teach the party
the hard lesson it needs to learn and mete out the punishment it deserves for
accommodating Trump over the past four years. As a Soviet commissar once put
it, “We must execute not only the guilty. Execution of the innocent will
impress the masses even more.”
These Never Trumpers, as my colleague Ramesh Ponnuru puts
it, are becoming Never Republicans. Their ranks run from the estimable
columnist George Will, to Charlie Sykes of the anti-Trump website The
Bulwark, to the operatives of The Lincoln Project.
Their hoped-for GOP electoral apocalypse doesn’t make
sense on its own terms, and their advocacy for one bears all the hallmarks of
this perfervid time in our politics — it, too, is rageful and extreme, but
satisfyingly emotive.
Let’s stipulate that Republicans have often excused or
looked past the inexcusable during Trump’s presidency, and almost every
Republican senator has a dimmer view of Trump than he or she will let on
publicly. GOP officeholders have been especially loath to speak of the
character defects that blight his presidency.
All of this deserves to be called out, but should the
party of Lincoln be leveled?
The Never Republicans refuse to account for the practical
calculations of practical politicians hoping, in difficult circumstances, to
achieve practical results.
Was Mitch McConnell supposed to say after Trump’s
election, “I can’t work with him,” and, to borrow a phrase, burn down any
chance of achieving anything constructive during a rare instance of unified
Republican control of Washington?
McConnell obviously bites his tongue about the president
all the time, but his main project has been working with the White House to
confirm judges to the bench who are thoroughly committed to faithfully
interpreting our laws and Constitution and will be doing their jobs when Trump
is a distant memory.
Even if you think McConnell should have played it
differently, what would defeating him and every other Senate Republican
accomplish?
Back in the Tea Party era, purists insisted on nominating
in 2010 the flagrantly unelectable Christine O’Donnell to stick it to the
Republican establishment good and hard. Sure enough, she lost to Democrat Chris
Coons, who is well on his way to a stress-free 30-year career in the Senate.
If Susan Collins loses her Senate seat in Maine this year
in a burn-it-all-down conflagration, it will play out the same way. Put aside
that she is hardly a Trumpist. If she goes down to defeat, Republicans are
never winning her seat back. And it doesn’t matter who the next Republican
president is — one of the moderates that some Never Republicans favor, or Don
Jr. — the Democratic senator from Maine will be there to oppose whatever he or
she is doing.
What the Never Republicans are hoping for is not just a
repudiation of Trump. They want the least resistance to the most progressive
president of our lifetimes to give him the greatest possible running room on
abortion, conscience rights, health care, judges, climate, immigration,
transgender policy, policing, gun rights, campaign finance, taxes, spending
and, surely, things we can’t even think of yet.
This is a high cost to pay, not just for the Republican
Party, but for the country — at least that’s what you think if you are a
conservative who believes progressives are deeply wrong on all these questions.
It’s not even guaranteed that the posited purifying loss
will purify. There will never be a Donald Trump again, but it’s entirely
conceivable that a post-Trump party will be more Trumpist, i.e., more populist,
than before. Regardless, even after a landslide, the Republican Party will be
made up of the same voters and officeholders who steadfastly supported Trump.
If the Never Republicans want a party untainted by these people, there is one available, and if they get their wish, it will be at the zenith of its power next year.
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