By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, June 05, 2024
How much will Donald Trump’s conviction in the New York
hush money case matter come November?
The obvious answer is that nobody knows. Still, I suspect
the verdict will matter, just not in ways that are easy or even possible to
predict.
A lot of the instant reaction revolves around polls. We
talk about polls not because they are so important but because we lack much
else to go on. Like the proverbial drunk who looks under the streetlamp for his
lost keys because the light is much better there, we look at polls because they
at least illuminate something, even if it’s not very much.
The smattering of
surveys conducted since Thursday’s verdict shows that slightly more than half
of Americans think the jury was correct. A CBS poll found
that the verdict changed very few minds, though a small number had more
negative views of Trump. None of that is very surprising given that attitudes
about the trial have tracked attitudes about Trump.
Now, if the judge throws Trump in jail for an extended
term—which seems both unlikely and indefensible given the nature of the
crime—it’s possible that attitudes will swing more in Trump’s favor. But if
it’s just for a day, attitudes probably won’t change so much as intensify.
If the opinions indicated by the latest polling hold
constant for the roughly 150 days between now and November 5, one could
plausibly argue that the verdict will cost Trump the election. The consensus
among experts across the partisan spectrum is that this election will be
decided by a tiny number of votes in a handful of states, so a movement of even
a couple of percentage points away from Trump could be decisive. But opinions
don’t hold constant, at least not among the kind of voters who will decide the election.
Until recently, Trump was enjoying higher favorability
ratings than at any time during his presidency. A mixture of nostalgia for the
pre-COVID Trump-era economy and dissatisfaction with President Biden has been
better for Trump than anything he actually did when he was president.
No one knows what will happen over the next five months,
but it’s not unreasonable to assume that the verdict will shrink in importance
for everybody over time. But given the closeness of the race and the voters who
will decide it, that doesn’t mean it won’t have lasting consequences.
Many Trump boosters responded
to the verdict with declarations such as “Trump
just won the election.” This wish-casting stems from the belief that
outrage over the verdict will cause more voters to rally around Trump. So far,
however, the evidence points to the opposite.
It’s true that Republican outrage over the verdict has
motivated Trump’s supporters in much the same way as the FBI search of
Mar-a-Lago. The result has been a windfall of donations to the Trump campaign,
including from crucial first-time donors. Given Trump’s fundraising
difficulties compared with Biden, that could matter.
But one analytical error Trump world consistently makes
is the idea that attitudes about him inside the MAGA bubble extend to voters
outside it. Trump’s biggest fans believe they represent America generally,
which is one reason they still believe America couldn’t have voted to oust him
in 2020.
We don’t know how the verdict will change the behavior of
not just the voters but also the candidates. If Biden overplays Trump’s status
as a “felon,” it could underscore the view that he lacks any persuasive
arguments for his reelection on the merits. It could also bolster the unfounded
charge that Biden orchestrated the prosecution to his benefit.
Meanwhile, if Trump listens to his biggest fans and
indulges his own sense of grievance—not a particularly big “if”—he could end up
making the election a referendum on him, and the chaos he brings, rather than a
referendum on Biden.
I don’t think this case ever should have been brought,
but I also think it’s crazy to say it represents “the end of the country as we
know it,” as Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance insisted.
Indeed, it’s remarkable to see so many people who once claimed the trial didn’t
matter to voters suddenly insist they will care so much about its outcome.
Voters will care about all sorts of things. And the odds
are good that to the extent Trump’s conviction matters at all, it ratifies the
opinions most Americans already held.
No comments:
Post a Comment