By Nick Catoggio
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
My
colleague John McCormack has a valuable
piece on the site today marking the third anniversary of Donald
Trump’s January 6 acquittal by the Senate that contains a bizarre bit of
political trivia I’d forgotten.
The
same conservative scholar who provided legal cover for Senate Republicans to
save Trump at the time has since become the most strident proponent for
disqualifying him from office under the 14th Amendment.
That
would be former judge J. Michael Luttig, who declared in an
op-ed published on January 12, 2021, that Trump couldn’t
constitutionally be tried for the impeachment charges once he left office on
January 20. The Senate ignored that and held a trial in early February anyway,
but Luttig’s reasoning was the fig leaf that gave cowardly Republicans the
pretext they needed to justify voting to acquit.
Three
years later, Luttig spends his days howling into
the void that Trump can’t serve again as president due to his insurrectionist
past. He’s going to lose that argument in court. Badly.
I
respect Luttig enough to assume that he arrived at those opinions in good
faith, mistaken though they may be. But trying to disqualify Trump through a
dubious, convoluted 14th Amendment process after discouraging the Senate from
doing so via a quick, clean, legally sound conviction mirrors the eternal
shortsightedness of the Republican establishment in dealing with Trump.
There’s
always some other institution, and some other time, that’s better suited to
hold him accountable.
Senate
Republicans declined to end Trump’s political career after January 6 when they
had the chance because they assumed the
criminal courts would eventually do it for them. Now that the courts have taken
up the matter, those same Republicans have been compelled by pressure from
their voters to argue that Trump’s prosecutions are politicized and
illegitimate. Only the voters themselves can properly issue a verdict on him,
they insist.
But
voters tried that in 2020 and you know how it ended. It’ll end
the same way this year if Trump loses again, with the very same
Republicans alleging that the American people couldn’t possibly have voted the
way they appear to have voted.
Every
opportunity to banish him from politics is a missed opportunity, by design.
Even
so, I’m loath to place most of the blame for Trump’s ongoing political
viability on Mitch McConnell and the Senate snivelers who refused to convict
him. To do so is to exculpate the GOP base, however indirectly. It’s the base,
not congressional Republicans, that preferred Trump to Ron DeSantis and Nikki
Haley this year. And it’s the base that’s created the electoral incentives for
those congressional Republicans to slavishly
follow Trump’s political whims.
There’s
no “Trump problem” in this party, I’ve said
before, only a “Trump voter problem.” Everything is downstream from that.
More so than cowardice, Republican senators are guilty of naivete in having
believed there was no need to convict him because their constituents would
recoil from Trump organically after the full extent of his menace was revealed
on January 6.
They
had a failure of imagination. Perhaps Luttig did too, unable to conceive at the
time that the voters of this country might ever elect Trump again after what
he’d done. (One wonders if his recent frantic 14th Amendment advocacy is a
matter of belatedly awakening to the truth.) No one imagined how deplorably
Republican primary voters would behave, so their representatives in the Senate
saw little downside to doing what those voters wanted of them in the moment by
acquitting him. Which is how democracy tends to work.
The
voters, not their nominal leaders, are most to blame for the right’s civic
rot—but a little leadership at a decisive moment might have contained that rot
considerably in time. On the third anniversary of Trump’s acquittal, the hard
fact remains that his trial was the best opportunity sane Republicans have ever
had or ever will have to rid American politics of him. And they blew it.
What
if they hadn’t?
***
There
are two scenarios in a world in which Trump is convicted by the Senate in 2021
and disqualified from holding future office. One is the “GOP crack-up”
scenario, the other is the “MAGA sucks it up” scenario.
The
“GOP crack-up” scenario is straightforward. After Trump is convicted and
expelled from American politics, his diehard loyalists in the grassroots right
revolt. Egged on by the man himself, they pledge never again to vote for an
outfit led by such weak-willed “uniparty” RINOs. Some follow Trump as he goes
off to found the “MAGA Party.” Some remain Republicans and mobilize to mount
primary challenges to Senate Republicans who convicted their hero. Others, not
given to voting regularly before Trump entered politics, revert to pre-Trump
form and simply lose interest in the GOP.
Desperate
to mollify angry MAGA voters, McConnell and his conference resolve to obstruct
Joe Biden’s agenda at every turn. There’s no infrastructure compromise or CHIPS
bill or gun bill or any other bipartisan accomplishment during Biden’s first
two years in this scenario. Senate Republicans opt to fight, fight, fight,
hoping to appease the populist base by doing so and to reunite the party
against the common Democratic enemy.
But
it doesn’t work. The GOP suffers in the 2022 midterms. In solid red states,
incumbents who voted to convict are successfully primaried and replaced in the
Senate by devout Trumpists. In battleground states, Republicans lose a number
of close races to Democrats due to poor turnout by its voters, poor quality in
nominees, and/or the base splitting between Republican Party and MAGA Party
candidates. The Senate GOP conference shrinks. Conservatives and disgruntled
populists end up pointing fingers at each other over who’s to blame for the
debacle.
Ron
DeSantis runs for president in 2024 with heavy support from the Republican
establishment, convinced that he alone can unite the two factions and bring
Trump voters back into the fold. But Trump, consumed as always by revenge, has
resolved to punish the GOP for the “disloyalty” it showed in disqualifying him.
He sets out to split the Republican vote by running his own handpicked MAGA
Party candidate for president, probably Donald Trump Jr. The right splinters
again and Biden wins reelection.
The
“MAGA sucks it up” scenario begins the same way the other one does, with Trump
voters irate at their representatives in the Senate. But amid all the furious
threats about primaries and new parties, most Trump voters quietly begin to get
over it.
With
Biden now in office and Republicans in Congress hellbent on thwarting him, the
populist litmus test for proper behavior by GOP officials gradually shifts from
defending Trump at all costs to opposing the new White House at all costs.
Slowly, grassroots animosity toward the party establishment begins to cool.
Trump keeps it on a simmer by screeching endlessly about how the GOP betrayed
him but his political salience starts to fade now that he’s out of electoral
politics.
Senate
Republicans who voted to convict him are duly primaried in 2022, but not all of
those challenges succeed. Galvanized by antipathy toward Biden, right-wing
turnout in the midterms is better than anticipated, defying Trump’s demands
that his supporters punish the party by boycotting the vote. Avenging him loses
some of its juice as a rallying cry for populists as they grow more impressed
with Ron DeSantis’ legislative victories in Florida.
DeSantis
ends up winning the party’s nomination in 2024 over Trump’s objections and most
of the right rallies behind him in the general election campaign. The
“uniparty” Republicans betrayed the former president when they voted to
disqualify him in 2021, most former Trump voters allow, but we
can’t give Joe Biden another four years by splitting our votes between the GOP
and the MAGA Party.
In
hindsight, it becomes clear that Trump’s conviction in the Senate broke the
cultish bond between him and most of his fans. Once he was no longer legally
eligible to play the “national savior” role he cultivated, MAGA supporters lost
the electoral incentive they had to reconcile themselves to his most depraved
offenses. Conspiracy theories around January 6 and propaganda about the rioters
being “political prisoners” lose ground outside the most feverish populist
sewers. Because Republican voters no longer need to believe such things in
order to psychologically justify their Trump support to themselves, they stop.
In time, they recover a degree of moral clarity about how contemptible his coup
plot was (although only a degree).
In
this scenario, Trump’s criminal trials become little more than a sideshow
during the presidential campaign—assuming they happen at all, which they might
not. With Senate Republicans having already done their duty by disqualifying
him from office, it’s an open question whether prosecutors would even proceed
with the wrenching ordeal of putting a former president with no chance of
returning to office on trial.
A
Senate Republican who voted to acquit him might answer all of that by noting
how, in either scenario, there would have been an immense near-term political
price in convicting him. One poll taken in the days after January 6 found
Trump’s job approval within the party at
87 percent, statistically indistinguishable from where it stood months
earlier. Millions of MAGA supporters would have resented their senators for
finding him guilty and would have expressed their fury in various ways. There’s
no question that party unity would have suffered; the questions are only how
much pain there would have been and how long it would have taken to subside.
There
would have been a price, no doubt. But what was the price of cowardice?
***
On
Monday night, almost three years to the day after he was acquitted, news broke
that Trump had endorsed new leadership for the Republican National Committee.
Of his two picks for co-chair, one pushed
claims of “massive” voter fraud in 2020 and the other is his
own daughter-in-law, who coat-tailed her way into politics in 2016 after
working as a producer for Inside Edition. If, like Caligula, Trump
owned a horse, doubtless the horse would be lined up for a plum position
somewhere too. In this monarchy, as in any other, those beloved by the king
wield enormous power whether they’re qualified or not. Insofar as there was any
separation between the RNC’s money and Trump’s own, it will soon be gone.
Meanwhile,
the Senate was voting on a new foreign aid bill to fund Ukraine, Israel, and
the Indo-Pacific. It passed
overwhelmingly, 70-29, but most
of the votes in favor came from Democrats. A majority of the GOP,
including erstwhile hawks like Lindsey Graham and Marco Rubio, preferred to
abandon the Ukrainians to Russia’s wrath because their king is skeptical of
further support. And although there were enough Republicans in the Senate
willing to defy him, the same might not be true in the House: The bill has been
declared dead on arrival by the new speaker, Trump courtier Mike Johnson.
In
fact, the past week has been one lesson after another about the immense—and
still rising—cost of acquittal three years ago.
The
best chance Congress has had in ages to improve immigration enforcement was immediately
abandoned by Republicans lest a more secure border end up complicating
Trump’s electoral chances this fall. Unfit cronies whom he’s promoted despite
their poor electoral track records were endorsed
anew by “serious” party leaders because that’s what Trump and his base
demand. And Trump himself has never been more erratic lately, declaring that
he’d encourage
Russia to attack NATO allies who don’t pull their own weight, warning
a pop singer not to
be “disloyal” by endorsing Biden, and firing off one of his
occasional musings about his political enemies that sounds like it
came straight from 1930s Europe.
The
price of cowardice in February 2021 is a political party in 2024 that’s no
longer recognizable as a political party. Never more so than right now, the
GOP is an autocracy run by a belligerent narcissistic halfwit and it concerns
itself more with said halfwit’s personal glorification than with enacting any
policy agenda. It will take years to undo this, assuming it can be undone.
That’s
a steep price. And if Trump is reelected this fall, it
may get much steeper.
Gutless
conservatives in the Senate made it all possible by choosing the path of least
resistance at a decisive moment, preferring to let their voters deal with Trump
eventually. Now those voters—or rather, the conservative rump among them that’s
troubled by all of this—will have to take them up on it.
Watching
Nikki Haley on the campaign trail the last few weeks, I wonder if more are
prepared to do so than we might assume.
Haley
began taking a posture toward Trump after the Iowa caucuses that I’ve described
as “the
half Liz.” She’s gone further than most Republicans by questioning his age
and even touting the verdict against him in his civil trial for defamation, but
she’s largely steered clear of Cheney-esque attacks about his moral fitness for
office. Lately, however, she’s begun to cross that latter line too. When Trump
wondered at a rally why
her husband wasn’t with her on the campaign trail (never mind Melania
Trump’s conspicuous absence from his own events over the past 14 months), Haley
seemed to take sincere offense. Her husband isn’t avoiding her because he’s
embarrassed by her also-ran status; he’s in the military and is currently
deployed in Africa.
“The
reality is, the closest [Trump] has come to harm’s way is a golf ball hitting
him on a golf cart,” Haley told
Fox News on Monday, alluding to Trump’s curious, er, luck in having
avoided military service in Vietnam. But impugning his manhood was just the
start.
“He
showed that with that kind of disrespect for the military, he’s not qualified
to be the president of the United States, because I don’t trust him to protect
them,” Haley said
of Trump on Monday. “Not qualified” is unusually strong language for a
Republican eyeing a future in the party to use against the leader. Yet over and over and over in
the last week she’s doubled down on it by asserting that he doesn’t “deserve”
to be, or has no business being, commander-in-chief after mocking her husband’s
service.
That’s
a moral argument. And moral arguments against Trump are, supposedly, only to be
made by Democrats.
She’s
even alluded
to an infamous story in The
Atlantic from 2020 that alleged Trump once called fallen American
soldiers “suckers” and “losers.” For years, populists have scoffed that their
hero would never say such a thing—not because they sincerely doubt it, I
suspect, but because it’s indefensible and therefore can only be denied, not
spun. The fact that The Atlantic reliably takes a left-wing
editorial line was all the evidence they needed that the claim was a smear. For
Haley to promote it, taking the side of the accuser in a left-right credibility
dispute with Trump, is a meaningful transgression against GOP orthodoxy, more
“full Liz” than “half Liz.”
Haley
surely knows that this line of attack won’t peel off many voters in South
Carolina who are supporting him. Trump’s first “major” controversy on the
campaign trail in 2015, after all, came when he mocked
war hero John McCain for—one gulps even now when recalling it—being
captured and imprisoned in the Hanoi Hilton. But that episode did him no damage
with Republican voters; in hindsight it was early proof
of his thesis that the right would indulge him in any behavior, no
matter how disgusting, for the sake of sticking it to their political enemies.
You
don’t attack his moral fitness the way Haley has lately because you think it’ll
win you the primary. You attack him on those grounds because you’ve come to
realize that you have no future in this party-that’s-no-longer-a-party—and,
perhaps, that you don’t much want one, given what it’s come to.
Notably,
she’s begun to lash out not just at Trump but at the various party organs he’s
coopted. She sneered at the RNC for
paying his legal bills and savaged congressional Republicans for dismissing
the new border compromise out of hand. The prospect of aid to Ukraine being
blocked in the House on his say-so has also set her off,
and that wound will fester all this year if the money remains bottled up and
Russia begins to advance.
Suddenly,
Nikki Haley sounds a lot like someone who’s as done with a Republican Party led
by Donald Trump as it appears to be done with her.
Not
long ago I thought
there was no chance that she’d refuse to endorse Trump once this
primary was over, but between her claiming that he’s not morally “qualified” to
lead and tearing into him for sabotaging initiatives like the border bill and
Ukraine funding that Joe Biden happens to support (which isn’t the
first time their messaging has
aligned lately), she sounds like she’s talking herself into neutrality
in the general election.
And
maybe talking grassroots conservatives who are dismayed by what the party’s
become into the same thing.
The
more prominent refugees from the pre-Trump GOP are willing to set an example by
boycotting the general election on moral grounds, the more those grassroots
conservatives will have to think about. When Chris Christie, for instance, was
asked this past weekend how he’ll vote in November, he said he couldn’t see
himself voting for Biden—but that he definitely
couldn’t vote for Trump. Haley herself was asked recently how she felt
about “weakening” the all-but-certain Republican nominee by attacking him
repeatedly during a hopeless primary campaign, and essentially shrugged in
response. “I’m weakening Trump because of who Trump is,” she said.
“Telling the truth in a primary is very important, so that’s what I’m doing.”
The
price of Senate Republicans’ cowardice in refusing to convict Trump three years
ago was missing their best opportunity to end the GOP’s “hostage
crisis.” To all appearances, figures like Nikki Haley and Chris Christie
are preparing to try to end it themselves this fall—assuming they have a
sizable enough following to do so.
And
why not try? Remade in the image of its leader, the party that populists took
hostage in 2016 has become so loathsome as to no longer be worth saving on
either moral grounds or policy grounds. A traditional conservative like Haley
who’s spent eight years pleading with MAGA types not to shoot that hostage
might reasonably look at what it’s come to, reckon frankly with the fact that
it has nothing left to offer her, and opt to pull the trigger herself.
Here’s
hoping she has more courage to do what’s right when the time comes than her
former friends in the Senate had. America needs civic leadership desperately.
And it won’t get any from the elected Republican “leadership” class.
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