By Michael Brendan Dougherty
Friday, August 12, 2022
For sheer drama in the Politics
section, nothing is better than Donald Trump. Yes, as soon as the FBI
searched Mar-a-Lago, all the news interest about Ron DeSantis seemed to
evaporate instantly. Yes, almost the entire conservative ecosystem immediately
shifted into its own “Democracy is Dying” melodrama. Yes, even many Trump-shy
Republicans started to speculate that a bit of overreach by the Biden admin
would backfire and renew the bond between Trump and Republicans. And yes, Trump
is a gift to the media hungry for clicks, ready outrage. Everyone in the White
House press corps and on cable news is anxious to sign their second or third
deal for a book in lurid red,
white, and black colors. On the night of the search, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee
said on Hannity, “I hope that right around Christmas, Donald Trump,
after these midterms, he announces he will run for president, and we rally
around him, and say he is the candidate.”
So is that it? Trump by acclamation?
No. Not quite.
It’s true that populist leaders like
Donald Trump do forge unique bonds with their supporters, bonds that transcend
merely transactional politics. That is why you hear pro-Trump commentators
saying that this wasn’t just an attack on Trump, but on all Americans who
support him. And Trump showed that he has the game mastered when he turned
around and explained that he now understands how innocent people can plead the
Fifth.
But Trump cannot play the victim card all
the way to the White House. There is a double-edged nature to his complaints about
the 2020 election, or about legal troubles that he is in now. Supporters may
instantly sympathize with Trump and intuitively understand why he is undergoing
these trials. But Trump needs to show himself triumphing over them to be a
credible leader.
Trump will also need to re-create the
magic that propelled him in 2016. His supporters anticipated and greatly
enjoyed delivering his election as a shock to all of polite Washington, a shock
that not only humiliated Democrats, but also humbled many Republicans, too.
Trump will have to find a way to make a sequel even more exciting than last
time. Part of his 2016 appeal was his willingness to tell truths that
Washington would not accept: that America was getting little for the war on
terror. Trump needs to re-create the iconoclastic thrill of supporting him, the
empowering sense that he is an instrument for crushing the establishment in
both parties.
Trump’s first term also will have
inevitably disappointed some of the people who projected their hopes onto him.
He had promised to “change” once in office and be less outrageous. He didn’t,
and many suburban women voters punished him in 2018 and 2020. He promised to
fulfill the long-nursed fantasy among some Republicans and many populists to
put a businessman at the top of Washington. The economy was good until the
pandemic started, but Trump frequently seemed like a boss who had lost control
of his underlings. A real boss wouldn’t have let a subordinate department like
the FBI soak up so much of his energy.
Finally, Trump needs to be what he was in
2015 and 2016; he needs to run on policies that people like. In his first run,
Trump promised to build a wall and revive American manufacturing. He promised
to confront China. The fact that the Biden administration is building some
parts of the wall and passed the CHIPs act, hoping to kick-start a
semiconductor industry in America as a hedge against Chinese adventurism or
blockades of Taiwan, is a testament to how successful Trump was at raising the
salience of these issues.
But he needs to do it again. DeSantis has
shown a keen eye in joining battles that conservatives already feel engaged in
— with woke teachers or corporations. But the Trump who won the presidency in
2016 had a talent for feeling out the secret hurts and aspirations of the
electorate available to Republicans, especially their wounded pride in their
communities.
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