By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, November 02, 2024
The images are indelible: Donald Trump’s mugshot.
His visit to a New York City bodega. His bloody ear and face and raised fist
after being shot. Standing before his name in lights at the RNC. Joining forces
with RFK Jr. beneath sparkling fireworks. Praying at the grave of the
Lubavitcher Rebbe. Serving French fries at McDonald’s. Selling out Madison
Square Garden. And then, this week, donning a safety vest and riding in a
garbage truck.
If Donald Trump is elected president for a second time on
Tuesday, such moments will have been signposts on the road to an extraordinary
comeback. Trump’s willingness to take risks, his boldness in appearing in
places and situations where the old Republican Party feared to tread, his knack
for the memorable photo and cutting riposte have defined his political career
and the 2024 campaign.
This campaign is notable, moreover, for Trump’s
confidence in his team, and his team’s confidence in their candidate and
strategy. McDonald’s, MSG, and the garbage truck are examples of a former
president flexing his power to command attention, thrill supporters, and expose
opponents as aloof and condescending. Such confidence has both strengths and
weaknesses. It imbues a campaign with the élan of victory and the determination
to succeed. But it may also blind a candidate to realities that limit his appeal.
Trump’s confidence stems from the belief that he is
stronger than he appears. And he appears strong. He is running ahead of his
polls from 2016 and 2020. He is more popular than ever. His coalition is
broader than before, reaching Hispanic voters, black men, young men, organized
labor, and disaffected Democrats. Trump is also competitive among independents.
The electorate leans Republican. Voters prefer the Trump years to the
Biden-Harris years. Biden is unpopular and demonstrates on a regular basis why
he is a liability. And Biden’s chosen successor, lifted upward this summer on
clouds of joy, has fallen back to earth.
The sorry state of Biden’s presidency convinced Trump’s
advisers of their ultimate victory. By July, as the Democrats self-immolated
over Biden’s terrible debate and physical and mental condition, the Atlantic
featured an interview with Trump’s strategists on their plans for a landslide
win. A few weeks later, when Biden dropped out and Vice President Kamala Harris
quickly secured the Democratic nomination, Trump’s pollster predicted,
correctly, that the “Harris Honeymoon” would not last. And when the political
class deemed Harris the winner of the second presidential debate, Team Trump
barreled forward, continuing its air campaign to define her as too weak and too
liberal to be president.
The game changed in Trump’s favor when Harris told the
ladies of The View that she couldn’t think of one thing she would do
differently than Biden. The ad cut from that soundbite damaged Harris. A second
spot, highlighting Harris’s position on transgender rights for imprisoned
illegal immigrants, was just as cutting. Harris was unwilling or unable to
separate from Biden and provide a coherent rationale for her candidacy. She was
forced to abandon her positive campaigning and concentrate instead on
delegitimizing Trump as unfit and extreme.
She may yet succeed. If Harris wins, it will be because
Trump’s confidence led him to downplay or dismiss two groups that could seal
his fate: women worried about abortion rights and suburban independents and
Republicans alarmed at Trump’s personality and the MAGA movement.
In choosing J. D. Vance for vice president, Trump secured
MAGA’s hold on the GOP rather than make a play for the middle. Trump’s
convention speech was 35 minutes of persuasion and 60 minutes of fan service.
His decision not to campaign with Nikki Haley is another sign that he does not
believe he needs her voters to win. The Madison Square Garden rally was a
classic mobilization effort, reminding Trump voters once again that Trump is on
their side and no one else’s, at the cost of 48 hours of negative press. And
Trump’s travel in the home stretch smacks of bullishness, with rallies planned
in Virginia and New Mexico in addition to the seven battlegrounds of Nevada,
Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. At
this stage, a candidate’s most valuable resource is time. On Tuesday we will
see if Trump’s has been well spent.
The race is too close to call. Republicans hope the
results will look like 2016 when Trump outperformed his polls. Democrats hope
the results will look like 2022 when an anticipated red wave crashed against an
anti-MAGA electorate. I keep thinking of the 1980 election, when polling showed
a close race up to the moment that Ronald Reagan won in a landslide and brought
Republicans control of the Senate. This is a different country, of course, and
these are different candidates. Landslides belong to the past. We don’t know
how things will break. We don’t know if we are destined for weeks or months of
recounts, lawsuits, judicial decisions, and unrest.
But we do know America wants change. And change is
guaranteed in the imperfect, querulous, dynamic, controversial, self-assured,
shameless, and captivating form of Donald J. Trump.
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