By Noah Rothman
Friday, April 28, 2023
Running a campaign for national office compels candidates
to expose themselves to a national audience, and that can be a fraught
prospect. Even the most capable advance teams can’t shield their campaign’s
principal from every pitfall on the trail or guard them against exposure to
this country’s varied and diverse voters, some of whom will be kooks. But a
prudent campaigner can minimize the risk of reputational damage that might
arise from an awkward photo-op or ill-considered remark. Donald Trump is not
that kind of campaigner.
On Thursday, Trump strolled into a New Hampshire diner to
bask in the admiration of his supporters and press the flesh. There, he was
confronted by one of his more adoring fans — Micki Larson-Olson, whose
red-white-and-blue-streaked hair, USA-themed peaked military cap, and flashy
Trump-branded fare conveyed her enthusiasm for the cause. “She’s a Jan. 6er,”
one of the restaurant’s patrons called out. Trump did not recoil from this
revelation. He was drawn to it.
“Where is she?” Trump asked. He sought her out and,
absent any solicitation, told her to “hang in there.” Trump later pulled
Larson-Olson, who was among the hundreds arrested and convicted for their participation
in the January 6 riots, toward him for a photo.
A competent political professional should have responded
to Larson-Olson’s overtures by smiling and backing away slowly. Instead, Trump
embraced her, praised her commitment, and heaped scorn on the authorities
tasked with enforcing America’s laws. He even went so far as to autograph
Larson-Olson’s backpack, which she said she wore as she trespassed inside the
Capitol complex on what she later told reporters was “the most patriotic day
of my life.”
“Patriots, I hear the woman,” Trump said of his
supporter, who informed him that her misdemeanor conviction resulted in her
imprisonment for 161 days. “It’s terrible,” he continued, “what they’re saying
is so sad, what they’ve done to January 6.”
This unnecessary display practically obliged the press to
perform a deep dive into Larson-Olson’s background, and that’s exactly what
they did.
The Dispatch reporter Andrew
Egger identified Larson-Olson, a regular Trump-rally attendee, as the
person who identified herself to him as “Q Patriot.” She went on to regale him
with tales about how “they used murdered and experimented-with children to
create” the Covid vaccines and provided previously unknown details about Pope
Francis’s clinical contributions to Operation Warp Speed.
Larson-Olson held nothing back in comments she
provided NBC News. “The punishment for treason is death, per the
Constitution,” she said, adding that the Republicans who certified the votes of
the 2020 election “deserve death.” The Trump superfan hoped she would secure “a
front seat” to witness “Mike Pence being executed.”
It should go without saying that the president’s conduct
is not just morally obtuse but irredeemably stupid. Voters do
not like what happened on January 6. They are not keen to see anything like that day’s events happen again,
and they’re sending every possible signal to the political class that they will
punish office seekers who fail to provide the requisite assurances. In a
post-election survey, FiveThirtyEight found that the 2022 midterm
electorate ranked “political extremism” just below inflation as their
second-biggest concern heading into the voting booth. That outlook among the
electorate helps to explain why the majority of Donald Trump’s hand-picked
candidates for open races up and down the ballot performed so dismally last November. It wasn’t abortion. It
wasn’t their economic prescriptions. It wasn’t foreign policy. It was those
candidates’ evasiveness about who actually won the 2020 election — a coy nod to
the beliefs that animated the rioters who sacked the Capitol Building.
Donald Trump can’t let 2020 go. Nor will members of the
press — not while the former president continues to provide them with a news
hook that allows them to keep January 6 fresh in the public’s minds. There’s a
reason why Joe Biden’s first reelection campaign video begins with images of the January 6 mob.
Revising the history of January 6 in pursuit of Donald
Trump’s redemption has been great for Donald Trump. It’s also been good for
Democrats and their allies in the press. It’s even benefited some conservative
media outlets, for whom staking out a contrarian approach to whatever the
prevailing media narrative happens to be is a lucrative enterprise. But for
Republican voters who want to see the GOP retake legislative chambers to
advance their political objectives, the martyrology around the January 6
rioters has been a disaster.
It’s never been clear to me what Republicans get from
their perpetual relitigation of the 2020 race and its attendant consequences.
Whatever it is, it isn’t “winning.”
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