At least one Trump Effect is still working: When
Republican candidates want to win, they champion immigration patriotism. Thus,
in a special election Democrats were hoping to win, Republican candidate Debbie
Lesko held off a strong challenge by explicitly supporting President Donald
Trump’s wall on the Mexican border.
Still, Lesko’s victory was far
narrower than President Trump’s 2016 margin in the district [Republican Lesko wins Arizona special election, by
Elena Schneider, Politico, April 24, 2018].
Mann Stream Media gloating that
Republicans are sure to lose the House is overheated, As even Slate admits,
special elections take place in an atmosphere far different than national
elections [How far ahead are Democrats, really? By
Josh Voorhees, April 25, 2018]. Still, the GOP—which by default means the GAP, Generic American Party—is
clearly in trouble. If only to save their own jobs, every elected Republican
should be acting with a sense of urgency.
But instead, Republicans, or at
least the Congressional leadership, seem to be utterly complacent, believing
the economy and the tax cut will allow them to keep their posts. Of course,
some Paul Ryan/ Jack Kempites may well be
stupid enough to believe this. But while polls show majority of voters accept
the GOP is better at handling the economy, a majority also disapprove of the
tax cut, the sole major accomplishment of united Republican government [Poll finds Republican tax cut remains unpopular,
MarketWatch, April 16, 2018]. Speaker Paul Ryan doesn’t seem to have
much of an agenda for his remaining time in Congress—incredibly, aside from
making the unpopular tax cuts permanent, the GOP Congress is focusing on
further easing banking regulations. [GOP Congress Has A Modest To-Do List Before Polarized
Midterms, by Anna Edgerton, Bloomberg, April
23, 2018]
So after one of the most
gut-wrenching, hard fought campaigns in political history, the GOP
Establishment took the priceless gift of united government control, a president
who owed his election to no one, and the prospect of a wholesale political
realignment and…governed as if they were trying to confirm the Left’s
caricature of them as water carriers for the rich corporate elite.
No wonder outright socialists
are rising in popularity [“Yes, I’m running as a socialist.” Why candidates are
embracing the label in 2018, by Farah
Stockman, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 23, 2018].
As Steve Bannon warned, there is either
going to be a right-populism or a radical movement of the Left that will
determine the future. [Bannon predicts turmoil and more right-wing populist
success in Europe, by Clare O’Dea, Irish
Times, March 8, 2018]
How did the GOP Establishment manage to blow
this? Of course, part of the fault lies with President Trump himself. Yet more
lies with the degenerate intellectual infrastructure of Conservatism Inc. Trump
made the (possibly fatal) mistake of working with Conservatism Inc. in good
faith, especially by making health care reform his first main legislative push.
Incredibly, it turned out no one in the Republican Party or Conservatism Inc.
had a plan to actually replace Obamacare, despite years of campaigning on it.
The second and more successful
legislative push, to cut taxes, is something no different than a Republican
would have done 30 years ago.
It is also absolutely clear
that no one in the Conservatism Establishment has thought critically about what
a comprehensive populist/nationalist agenda would look like. There’s an obvious
reason for this: anyone who could come up with such an agenda would have been
purged from Conservatism Inc. many years ago. (We’ve been writing about it at
VDARE.com for years—some of us after being purged.)
Thus, almost the only political
professionals on the American Right President Trump could turn to after his
victory were the same people he had just defeated.
For example, the Koch Brothers
network is bragging about its success in affecting policy, naturally drawing
hostile attention from the Left [Koch network success in Trump era draws Democratic
pushback, by Lisa Mascaro, AP, April
23, 2018]. Yet even as the Left is energized by this, the Koch brothers are
pressuring Republicans to take the suicidal step of passing amnesty just before
the midterm elections [Pro-Mass Immigration Koch Brothers Threaten GOP: Pass
Amnesty For Illegal Aliens Or Lose Funding In Midterms, by
John Binder, Breitbart, April 24, 2018]
Similarly, Republicans have
richly rewarded major banks with their policies [Trump tax law paves way for Wall Street banks to hit huge
first-quarter profits, AP, April 20, 2018]. Yet
banks are also cutting ties with the gun industry in response to a Main Stream
Media lynch mob, thus directly attacking a core Republican constituency. But
rather than defending their voters, many Republicans seem indifferent to this
attack [GOP split as banks take on gun industry, by
Zachary Warmbrodt, Politico, April 22, 2018].
Although President Trump has
done his best to push for the traditional Republican agenda, the Republican
Establishment has not returned the favor and co-operated on Trump’s own agenda.
They have not funded the border wall, nor have they taken up immigration
legislation he has specifically and repeatedly called
for. Thus Matt Glassman at National Review smirks that “not
one major piece of legislation has been taken up that ideologically reflects
Trumpism rather than Republican orthodoxy” [How Congressional Republicans Have Neutered the Trump
Agenda, April 25, 2018].
Glassman argues many of
President Trump’s backers are committed to protecting him personally, rather
than his policies. Unfortunately, President Trump appears to believe the same
thing. The result is a worst-of-both-worlds situation for National Conservatives.
The true lesson of 2016 is not
that Donald Trump is a master politician, it’s that a reality show star was
able to beat the entire Republican field because he took up important issues,
especially immigration, that the GOP Establishment refused to confront—and
still refuses to confront.
It’s because Candidate Trump
was “taking on the system” that he was able to get away with so much. During
the campaign, Donald Trump’s personal foibles were turned into strengths. He
was going to destroy the political establishment of both parties, “drain the
swamp,” and reorient America’s trade, immigration and foreign policies. When
the entire Republican Party threatened to abandon him after the bawdy Access Hollywood tapes
came to light, then candidate Trump delivered the most fiery speech of his
campaign, slamming a “Washington Establishment and the financial and media
corporations” that exist only to enrich themselves. [Transcript: Donald Trump’s Speech Responding To Assault
Accusations, NPR, October 13, 2016]
But the same shameless, damn-the-torpedoes
approach doesn’t work when he is pushing tax cuts so that Hollywood celebrities
have more money to advocate for gun control.
Still, even utterly
conventional Republicans like Reince Priebus now at least pay lips service to
the idea that traditional Republicanism has to make a working-class appeal in
order to win [Reince Priebus: GOP will revert to old ways after Trump, by
Paul Bedard, Washington Examiner, April 15, 2018]. Y
And Preibus is fooling himself
about the GOP simply going back to the status quo ante bellum. While he no
doubt thinks it’s just a question of marketing, the truth is that important
issues like the National Question are not going away. Nor is the GOP imperative
of gaining a greater share of the white vote going
to disappear anytime soon. Out of sheer self-preservation, more Trump-like
candidates will soon emerge.
One may be Ted Cruz, who, by
the end of the primaries was flanking Trump on his right when
it came to immigration. Today, Ted Cruz is championing his opposition to Sanctuary Cities in his tough
re-election fight [Ted Cruz rails against Obamacare, ‘sanctuary cities’
before Austin crowd, by Robert Garrett, Dallas
News, April 3, 2018].
Reporters are also taking note
of Cruz championing his “unyielding opposition to illegal immigration” and his
strategy of inreach to his base. [Although now an insider, Ted Cruz campaigns like an
outsider in Texas Senate race, by John C.
Moritz, USA Today Network, April 25, 2018]
Liberal Dems —
like Hillary and @BetoORourke — say anyone who wants to secure
the border and end sanctuary cities must be a bigot and “hate Mexicans.” That’s
a nasty insult directed at millions of Texans who welcome legal immigrants
(like my Dad), but also respect rule of law. https://twitter.com/texastribune/status/981259806550962178 …
The Congressional GOP may pay
the price for its complacency, though the midterms are still months away and a
lot can happen before then. And even Donald Trump does not appear to understand
what he set in motion.
But it’s already clear that
traditional Republicanism, while popular in the Beltway and among the donor
class, simply does not have the constituency to deliver political victory.
There aren’t enough bankers to
win a presidential election. But there are enough voters who want to hear a
populist message.
And if President Trump doesn’t
deliver for them, some ambitious future candidate will—regardless of what
Conservatism Inc. has to say about it.
James Kirkpatrick [Email him]
is a Beltway veteran and a refugee from Conservatism Inc.