By Noah Rothman
Tuesday, May 28, 2024
“The Libertarian Party should nominate Trump for
president of the United States,” Trump said in an address to the
Libertarian National Convention over the weekend. The exhortation was met with
a resounding chorus of boos and jeers. “What?” the former president
asked, reeling from the hostile reception. “Only if you want to win,” he
steadied himself. “Maybe you don’t want to win.”
When it comes to the Libertarian Party, that’s not an
assumption that can be summarily ruled out. But nor is it especially remarkable
to see a group of committed ideologues beholden to the promotion of
laissez-faire economics at home and nonintervention abroad look askance at the
former Republican president, particularly given his explicit disdain for the virtues of small government.
Nor should the reaction to Trump surprise anyone given
the way in which he solicited libertarians’ support. Trump insisted that he was himself a “libertarian without
even trying to be one.” Why? Because “in the last year, I’ve been indicted by
the government on 91 different things, so, if I wasn’t a libertarian before, I
sure as hell am one now.”
For libertarians who come to their free-market maximalism
and civil libertarianism by way of an intellectual exercise, Trump’s shallow
profession of fealty to the libertarian movement comes off as remarkably flip.
His conversion narrative begins and ends with a self-pitying reflection on his
own circumstances. It culminates in the stereotype that libertarians are
thoughtlessly soft on crime. By the end of his solicitation, Trump appears to
lose even the few convention attendees who initially cheered his appearance.
Trump seemed embittered by his reception. “Keep getting
your 3 percent every four years,” he closed dismissively. The animosity is
clearly mutual.
In recent weeks, Trump and his campaign have received
deserved plaudits for making the most of the former president’s legal
obligations by cleverly holding impromptu campaign events in New York City’s
diverse boroughs. Even if no one expects Trump to carry the Bronx in November, making a show of his appeal to voters
outside the Republican base is still valuable. Not only can that approach yield
dividends by peeling off Democratic voters on the margins, it also hijacks the
news cycle. The Biden campaign seems incapable of doing anything interesting,
and Trump has filled the void left by the president’s comatose reelection
effort.
But there are risks in that strategy as well as rewards.
As the former president’s appearance before the Libertarian Convention
demonstrates, there’s little value in appealing to voters outside the base if
the candidate cannot conceal his contempt for them.
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