Since I’m a policy wonk, I rarely play the role of political pundit other than biennial election predictions.
But I’m getting a lot of requests to comment about Trump, especially in light of the recent protest/riot/insurrection and the ongoing political fallout (impeachment, etc).
So here are 10 observations (full disclosure: I didn’t vote for Trump in 2016 or 2020, but have never been part of the Never-Trump community).
Trump’s style is bluster and bullying – As I wrote way back before the 2016 election, Trump’s personal style is akin to a temperamental child. This can be entertaining (which is why CNN and other networks gave him so much attention during his initial campaign), but it also has limitations as an approach to governance (for instance, you don’t stop a virus by merely asserting it won’t come to the United States).
Trump is America’s “Crazy Uncle” – Early in his presidency, I happened to be in New Zealand and was asked about Trump in a TV interview. I basically said he’s like a grouchy and opinionated uncle who shows up on holidays and dominates the conversation with controversial statements. Given what’s happened over the past few years, that observation holds up well.
Republicans lawmakewrs in Washington never liked Trump – GOPers in the House and Senate like some of the things Trump has accomplished (tax reform and conservative judges), but they’ve never liked having him as president because he is too erratic and too self-centered. But most important, they’ve been afraid his simultaneous popularity (with core GOP primary voters) and unpopularity (with, say, suburbanites) is a threat to their ability to stay in power. In other words, it’s hard to win general elections in some places as a Trumpian populist but also hard to win GOP primaries in many places as a Never-Trumper.
Republican voters, by contrast, like Trump – One thing that surprised me over the past four yeas is that I found strong support for Trump from grassroots conservative Republicans. Yes, they didn’t like his fiscal profligacy and they mostly didn’t like his protectionism, but they did like the fact that he was a “fighter,” unlike so many (but not all) Republican politicians who get cozy with the DC establishment. They also figured he was worth supporting because he was so reviled by the establishment media (i.e., the enemy of my enemy is my friend).
Republican lawmakers generally have been in a no-win situation – Because of Trump’s popularity with GOP voters, Republican lawmakers have felt a lot of pressure to act as Trump loyalists even though many of them don’t like his behavior and disagree with some of his policies.
Be glad there were normal GOPers in the Trump Administration – Some people in the Never-Trump community want to create a blacklist of people who worked for Trump. This is misguided in the vast majority of cases. Most Trump appointees had nothing to do with Trump’s excesses and instead did good things (deregulation, for instance) in the various agencies and departments where they worked.
There are three GOP wings: Populist Trumpies, conservative Reaganites, and the establishment – Most pundits portray GOP infighting as a battles between Trumpist conservatives and the Republican establishment (symbolized, perhaps, by Sen. Romney). But that’s an insufficient description of what’s happening because it overlooks the fact that there are plenty of Reagan-style conservatives who definitely are not part of the establishment, yet don’t fit in with Trump’s big-government populism. It will be very interesting to see which anti-establishment strain wields more influence in the next few years.
Trump’s legacy to GOP: Total Democratic control of DC – On January 21, 2017, Republicans controlled the House, the Senate, and the White House. Four years later (a few days from now), Democrats will control the House, the Senate, and the White House. By way of background, one of the reasons I don’t like George W. Bush is that his failed polices paved the way for the left to have total control of Washington in 2009 and 2010. Shouldn’t Trump be judged similarly?
In spite of his many flaws, why did Trump win normally Democratic states? – While I just explained that Trump set the stage for the left to have total power in Washington, Republicans need to figure out how Trump managed to win some states in 2016 that historically have been unwinnable when contested by establishment Republicans (though he lost some traditionally GOP-leaning states in 2020).
In spite of his many flaws, why did Trump get more minority votes? – Similarly, Republicans need to figure out how a supposedly racist Trump managed to win a higher percentage of minority voters than recent GOP nominees such as John McCain and Mitt Romney. The bottom line is Republicans need to figure out if there are good parts of Trumpism once Trump is out of the picture.
I’ll close with a few statements:
- It is perfectly okay to have voted for Trump because you liked some of his policies (whether they are ones I like, such as tax cuts, or ones I don’t like, such as protectionism).
- It is perfectly okay to have voted against Trump for the same reason.
- It is perfectly okay to have voted for Trump because you wanted to shake up the Washington establishment with unconventional behavior.
- It is perfectly okay to have voted against Trump because his unconventional behavior was offensive.
- It is perfectly okay to have been a Never-Trumper or a Trumpian populist.
- What’s not okay, though, is to engage in political violence.
- And what’s utterly awful is lying to supporters and creating the conditions for political violence.
P.S. While it’s worth spending some time to dissect and analyze the past four years, I hope that libertarians, Reagan conservatives, Trump populists, Never-Trumpers, establishment Republicans, etc, all join together to fight some of Biden’s awful ideas (the “public option” threat to private health insurance, class-warfare taxes, gun control, a blue-state bailout, etc).
[…] actually answered that question early last year. Here’s some of that […]
[…] actually answered that question early last year. Here’s some of that […]
Well said. Plus, if the elections are rigged, then what good does all that money the GOP wants to spend electioneering do?
@bluecat57: I’d say you’re partly right, but the media, who have been gaslighting the public under Democratic command since at least the Reagan era, deserve a lot of the blame and even confessed in TIME how they helped the cheaters.
The silver lining is what Trump laid out in his CPAC speech. He has withdrawn the use of his name from the RNC so that he can use his brand to conduct a purge of the RINOs from the party. After which he may or may not try again (he is over 80 and there are other capable candidates to take his place).
But if the Biden camp are willing to be as blatant cheaters as they were this time, then power will not be transferred peacefully again. And that means what you think it means.
The vast majority of Trump voters want someone who fights like him – preferably Reaganite, populist if need be. Republicans who win in the near future will realize this, and figure out how to do it without Trump’s tragic flaws. Losers from central casting need not apply.
If you think Trump lost with legitimate votes, I can’t help you. If you disagree, you have less concrete data (you’re taking state results on faith) than those questioning the results in many states. If you think those have been heard by courts, let alone non-partisan courts, I can’t help you either. Assume the other side is correct and do your research.
Singularly the worst piece that I ever read from you. BTW, name me a Reagan Republican…unless that means one that was in office during his administration. Ron Portman? Gov. DeWine of Ohio? Oh…John Kasich?! Although he is no longer in office. President Trump’s protectionist policies were not strategic, but a tactic to punish NOT fair trading, but punish outsourcing all capital that might benefit the tens of millions of Americans that can’t and won’t ever “learn to code.” Kevin Williamson of NRO much?
I didn’t vote for Trump in the primaries in 2016. I voted for him in the general as easily the lesser of two evils. But I became a Trump supporter after he took office. Trump did something that few Republicans have accomplished or even seriously tried to do in the last few decades: He enacted conservative policies. Before Trump, Republicans would run on a conservative platform, and then once elected would promptly support liberal policies. And when challenged, they tell us that they have to support these liberal policies to stay in power, so that they will be able to push conservative policies. Which they never did, because they were always convinced they had to support liberal policies to stay in power. Trump actually pushed conservative policies. He repealed thousands of regulations, ended many of the government’s infringements on religious liberty and freedom of speech, did more to bring peace to the Middle East than has been accomplished in decades, etc.
I didn’t agree with everything he did and of course he had some failures along the way. But he also had many successes. He was surely the most effective conservative president in my lifetime.
Poor Dan! He’s being vilified by some commenters for not jumping onto the Leftist bandwagon and condemning Trump to the lowest level of hell.
Trump is a fighter and never cowered in front of the onslaught from the Left. Trump endured 4 years of lies, slander and libel and now a moot impeachment that would be tossed out if there were any higher court.
We will now have to endure the much less vociferous but still potent evil of a Biden/Harris pathway to socialism and authoritarianism.
our ruling class has become a self absorbed group of corrupt idiot savants… their gift? exploiting their governmental positions to enrich their families and themselves… and retaining their positions of power and privilege… the socialist democrats are composed of 3 main groups… the minority is traditional democrats… old people who have been loyal democrats since the days of John and Robert Kennedy… most of them are elderly and suffering the ravages of sanctitude… the vast majority of their membership is in the Groucho-Marxists class… younger people who have come of age during the socialist indoctrination period of the last quarter century… they are cute… but worthless… the most powerful faction of the party is the bolshevist wing… they are committed to using any means necessary to achieve a philosophical “equality of outcome”… of course real equality is impossible… but as a political talking point… it’s relatively effective…
the republicans have the same skill set of political survival and personal enrichment… but they hide behind a tradition of conservative values… they are narcists… with little interest in doing anything except maintaining the status queue… as it is…Trump is an anomaly… a symptom of stirrings within the electorate… he had 74.2 M votes… but he was still a victim of the creatures of the swamp…
the result is… we are screwed… until a viable third party emerges… and we can enact TERM LIMITS and a federal spending cap…
hey! it could happen………………………………
“there are plenty of Reagan-style conservatives who definitely are not part of the establishment,”
There are so few of them they they could all fit inside all of the world’s remaining phone booths.
Not an American but for me is quite simple: It is between Totalitarianism and Freedom.
Trump did not cared if you eat meat, if you said what, if you used a car with internal combustion engine, if ….many others things, he let you live.
Biden, or better the people that are with him, want to destroy everyone that is not like them and do not have problem of using violence to achieve their means including being racists and sexists. Books are burned and stores take out books due to threats, Universities and companies cancel.
This was a poor post from an author that i usually appreciate but that it seems have no notion that Totalitarianism just arrived.
So bullying all women voters with a full set of real teeth was not such a good plan. To coerce women in violation of the 9th, 13th and 14th amendments when they are holding the 19th Amendment–loaded, cocked, with a shell in the chamber and another 60 million in the clip–is no longer the way to keep a trunk in the trough. I will not miss either half of The Kleptocracy.
Mr. Mitchell,
I voted for Trump because he would–and did–significantly disturb politics as usual, which generally means appeasing the Democrats. However, the deep state didn’t like it, and rigged various states elections–my state being one of them–to “find” enough votes to surpass however many legitimate votes there were for Trump. This is common practice in Democrat held Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, and the historical record shows it.
Kevin
Susquehanna County, PA
Sent from my Behemoth Dell 690
[…] Ten Observations about Trump and the GOP […]
Trump’s style is bluster and bullying and most people can’t get past his style to the facts that he is speaking.
Trump is America’s “Crazy Uncle” and like that crazy uncle of yours, he has spoken the ugly truth about Democrats, Republicans, America and other countries in the world. We may not like what we heard and most people “can’t handle the truth.”
Republicans lawmakewrs in Washington never liked Trump because Republicans are losers. They have had several opportunities over the past five decades to change America for the better, but they rather act like a bunch of losers than act like winners.
Be glad there were normal GOPers in the Trump Administration, be sad, VERY sad. If all the Republican establishment types and Deep Staters weren’t in his administration America would not only be Great Again, but the Greatest nation on earth.
Trump’s legacy to GOP: Total Democratic control of DC not quite. The UniParty existed before Trump. The only reason most of our elected employees identify as “Republican” is that they couldn’t win if they properly identified themselves as the Democrat/Leftists that they really are. Most of them were “trans” before “trans” was cool.
In spite of his many flaws, why did Trump win normally Democratic states? Because most Americans are, well, Americans who believe in Americanism as defined by Dennis Prager. The alternatives are Leftism (Democrats, RINOs, Globalists, most other countries) and Islamism (not Islam, but Islamism the political world dominating philosophy espoused by Iran, ISIS, Al Queda, et al).
In spite of his many flaws, why did Trump get more minority votes? Because Trump did good for minorities not just say stuff to make them feel good.
In My Opinion it is absolutely not okay to have voted against Trump for any reason unless you hate America. Yeah, you are being a squish like the loser Republicans if you think it is okay to vote against someone that is trying to improve the lives of every American, nay, every human on earth.
“Never-Trumpers, establishment Republicans, etc, all join together to fight” ROFLMAO The reason we are in this mess is because Never-Trumpers and establishment Republicans are losers who have never fought for anything except their place at the pork trough (barrel?, feels like I’m mixing metaphors). And if one libertarian I’ve interacted with recently is any indication of the position of other libertarians, “live and let live”, we are well and thoroughly screwed.
See my long rebuttal in your web browser if it doesn’t show up here.
I think you are correct. This is the first time I have been really disappointed by Mitchell.
I must strongly disagree. The “establishment Republicans” are what prevented Trump from firing massive numbers of bureaucrats, and from prosecuting outrages such as Spygate and Fast & Furious. And the reason Democrats are so committed to taking Trump out before January 20 is to prevent him from appointing special prosecutors to prosecute Spygate and Biden’s bribes, and to prevent him selling the country out to China.
There will never be another fair election in the US if Biden is allowed to keep the results of his cheating in this one.
I seriously think this article is too petty to be worthy of being penned by Mitchell. Goes to show you.