By Jack Butler
Friday, December 30, 2022
Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell’s recent comments to NBC News that he will “actively look for
quality candidates” for 2024 Senate races, as he did not do for the 2022
midterms, instead mostly deferring to Donald Trump in primary contests, have
occasioned some distemper at National Review. Dan McLaughlin gives McConnell credit for his tactical acumen and for
having correctly identified candidate quality as a key factor in Republicans’
Senate underperformance this year, yet nonetheless urges Mitch to stay out of
2024 primaries. “He is a poor judge of political talent: His picks were
repeatedly rejected by primary voters during the Tea Party era, and he even
talked Trump into backing electoral losers such as Luther Strange in Alabama,”
Dan writes. Phil Klein concurs, taking the argument even further than Dan does.
“McConnell is also not a good judge of candidate ‘quality,’ because he is
motivated primarily by picking candidates who, were they to win, wouldn’t be
much trouble in Washington,” he writes. Phil also cites the example of Strange,
in addition to McConnell’s initially backing Charlie Crist over Marco Rubio in
2010.
McConnell is not perfect. He has made some mistakes in
this area. Though the debacle of Alabama strikes me as sui generis and
difficult to blame on any one person, it is safe to conclude now that Crist
over Rubio, for example, was a poor choice. In 2022, though, the problem didn’t
seem to be too much Mitch, but rather not enough. In the NBC story, McConnell
says that he stayed out of every primary but two: Alabama and Missouri.
Everywhere else, he believed that he simply lacked the wherewithal to push
candidates who could prevail over those backed by Trump. Regardless of whether
McConnell could have done more, the triumph of what Charlie Cooke has called “Tim Burton Republicans” over the much-loathed “Generic Republicans”
is why Republicans are still impotently wailing in the Senate minority. In this
cycle, as John McCormack has noted, voters in key states wanted a Republican Senate but
declined to vote for the Republican candidates on offer. The problems with
modern Republican primaries are bigger than Mitch McConnell.
It is instructive to consider what might be the ideal
situation. That would be to achieve something like the synthesis of 2014 that
arose out of merging the populist energy of the Tea Party years with the
establishment/electability concerns to which they were often opposed. Populism
isn’t always popular; “electable” candidates aren’t always elected. Together,
however, they are electorally powerful. But 2014 didn’t happen by accident.
Rubio–Crist was a welcome example of establishment failure. Recent cycles saw
plenty of failures in the other direction. In 2010, Sharron Angle blew a chance
to knock out Harry Reid in Nevada, and Christine O’Donnell blew a winnable
Senate race in Delaware. In 2012, Richard Mourdock (Indiana) and Todd Akin
(Missouri) became casualties in the “war on women.”
Republicans really ought to have had a majority by 2014;
in that cycle, they acted like they wanted one. One step the National
Republican Senatorial Committee took that year was to run a “candidate boot camp” in
which office-seekers, among other things, “had to watch each other stumble,
stammer, run from the cameras. They were drilled on policy, then had the
cameras turned on them. They were briefed on common media mistakes, then had
the camera turned on them. They were shown footage of Akin and Richard Mourdock
making fools of themselves two years ago, then had the camera turned on them
again.” To be clear: This is not a surefire approach.
Nor is it always a satisfactory one. Mike Castle, whom
Christine O’Donnell defeated, might not have won in Delaware. And if he had, he
would have undoubtedly frustrated Republicans. But would he have frustrated
them more than Democrat Chris Coons has? Former South Carolina Republican
senator Jim DeMint, who left the Senate to lead the Heritage Foundation and
then left Heritage to serve as chairman of the Conservative Partnership
Institute, once said, “I’d rather have 30 Marco Rubios in the Senate than 60
Arlen Specters.” Arlen Specter, the former Pennsylvania senator who switched
parties from Republican to Democrat but lost to Republican Pat Toomey in 2010
anyway, was terrible; the Arlen Specters should be replaced wherever you can
get away with it. But not every state or race has or can have a Marco Rubio. To
pretend otherwise is a recipe for more of the sort of impotent minority wailing
that DeMint’s logic, executed fully, would invite.
Nor should the results of the Republican primaries in the
2022 midterm cycle be seen as some sort of inviolable mandate. Forget even the
fact that many of the candidates they produced lost in the general elections.
It is incomplete to argue, as Michael Brendan Dougherty did earlier this month, that “whether a candidate can
win a general election against a Democrat can’t be the only criterion for
determining an ‘electable Republican.’ Whether he or she can win a Republican
primary matters just as much.” In many of these primaries, the absence of a
respectable alternative left the contest to an inferior, typically
Trump-endorsed candidate by default. (Consider, as evidence, the retirements of such viable political
figures as Rob Portman in Ohio and Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania, and the
decisions of other viable Senate contenders — Doug Ducey in Arizona, Larry
Hogan in Maryland, Chris Sununu in New Hampshire — not to run.) Without serious
respectable competition, inferior candidates could motivate a sufficiently
large plurality to prevail against a majority of a primary electorate that
opposed them.
As Charlie responded to Michael, “most primary elections are
internal polls of one faction within one jurisdiction.” It’s representative of
nothing other than a moment of indecision and/or inaction that one faction saw
fit to take advantage of. McConnell’s own words give evidence of how this
happened in 2022. This was a collective political failure. As Charlie
elaborates, “pointing out that primary voters have not been very good at this
recently is not “getting democracy backwards” or demanding “that voters solve
problems for politicians”; it’s demanding that, within the democratic process
that is the primary, voters get better at solving problems for
themselves.”
But that wasn’t true in every primary this cycle. Move
outside of the Senate: In Georgia and Nebraska, Republican gubernatorial
candidates prevailed against Trump-backed challengers. It was easier for Brian
Kemp, a popular incumbent who is better at politics than you are. In Nebraska, though,
ultimate victor Jim Pillen had to cultivate both the grassroots and the
respectable elements of the state political establishment to secure his victory. But that wouldn’t have happened if
he and others in the state hadn’t worked toward it as an end, as tautological
as that may sound. Gubernatorial races and Senate races are different beasts,
to be sure — the former by definition more state-based than the nationalized
contests Senate races have become. But they offer lessons here regardless.
Among those lessons: that moving past Trump, increasing
Republican electoral viability, and regaining lost political power are all
valid, and connected, goals. Further: that these things will not happen
automatically. Ergo: Someone must act on them. The ideal vehicle is a state
Republican Party apparatus such as Georgia’s, with a competent, principled, and
self-interested leader such as Brian Kemp. But Brian Kemps will not always be
at the helm. So what do you do then?
Certainly “nothing” is the wrong answer. Both Dan and
Phil urge Mitch to beg off because, if nothing else, his interventions would be
counterproductive. “The visible backing of McConnell makes it easy to pillory
perfectly good Republican candidates as tools of an ‘establishment’ that
doesn’t actually run much these days,” Dan writes. Phil adds: “There is no
greater gift that McConnell could give to an upstart populist Senate candidate
than to hand-pick somebody of his own and allow that candidate to serve as an
avatar for everything that people hate about Washington and national
Republicans.” Maybe so. But that seems like a really stupid and self-destructive
state of affairs, one that Democrats took cynical but successful advantage of in this midterm cycle by
promoting the weakest Republican-primary candidates and then defeating them in
general elections. This state of affairs is to a considerable extent
responsible for the Republicans’ current minority status and for the impotent
wailing about said status that serves many of its more irresponsible members
just fine.
If McConnell is not the one to challenge this perverse
dynamic, then who? It has to be someone. The alternative is not that nothing
will happen if no one does; it’s that selfish, electorally destructive actors
will continue to take advantage of primary idiosyncrasies to narrow-plurality
their way to further irrelevance and loss. The attempt to game out what
McConnell should do based on what the prospective reaction might be strikes me
as the same sort of inactivity-inducing logic that would have, say, National
Review decline to criticize Trump because doing so is “exactly what Trump
wants.” It’s indicative of, and conducive to, the same paralysis in which “the best lack all conviction,
while the worst are full of passionate intensity” — allowing the latter to
prevail by default.
In the NBC interview, McConnell states that he believes
Trump’s clout has been “diminished.” But further diminution won’t happen
automatically. It has to be worked toward consciously, by those who seek it as
an end. Whatever the issues with his plans, at least he’s doing something. If
not Mitch, then who?
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