Author Topic: How the Republican Party created Donald Trump  (Read 349 times)

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HAPPY2BME

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How the Republican Party created Donald Trump
« on: March 06, 2016, 05:04:50 pm »
At the core of Donald Trump’s political success this year are the grievances of a sizable and now vocal block of disaffected voters, many of them white and working-class, and a Republican Party that has sought and benefited from their support while giving them almost nothing tangible in return.

The New York businessman’s position as the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination has plunged the party into a contentious debate and raised some of the most troubling questions about its future since the Watergate scandal in 1974 or Barry Goldwater’s landslide defeat a decade earlier.

Campaigning on Friday, Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.), who is seeking to deny Trump the nomination, put the threat in apocalyptic terms. If Trump becomes the nominee, he said, “He will split the Republican Party and it will be the end of the modern conservative movement.”

Trump and so-called Trumpism represent an amalgam of long-festering economic, cultural and racial dissatisfaction among a swath of left-out Americans who do not fit easily into the ideological pigeonholes of red and blue, right and left.

James W. Ceaser, a professor in the politics department at the University of Virginia, describes the eruption behind Trump as less an “ism” and more “a mood” that has been at a near-boil for some time. But why has it hit with such force in this election? “They have a leader who can articulate it,” Ceaser said.

The sight of establishment Republicans recoiling at Trump strikes some analysts, particularly on the left, as ironic. These GOP critics see Trump’s appeal as the logical result of decades of efforts by the GOP to discredit government and more recently of the party leadership’s passive acceptance of virulent and in some cases racially tinged opposition to President Obama. Having sown the wind, the argument goes, the party now reaps the whirlwind.

Others, however, say that Trumpism, no matter how much it threatens the existence of the modern-day Republican Party, is a broader manifestation of the uneven impact of globalization on a significant segment of the population, a rejection by these voters of institutions and elites in both parties, whom they see as having failed to listen to or respond to their plight.

In reality, it is both, a problem that has had implications for both major parties over a period of years but that has become particularly acute for the Republicans at this moment because the party so badly needs those voters to win in November.

One can scroll back over a half-century to find reasons or explanations for the rise of Trump. The Republican Party has long been engaged in recurring struggles between its long-dominant establishment wing and various embodiments of an anti-establishment, conservative insurgency seeking to upend the status quo.

Goldwater won that battle for the nomination in 1964 over the eastern elites, led by then-Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, but split the party and went down to a crushing defeat in the general election. Out of the ashes came Ronald Reagan, who though twice elected governor of California, nonetheless was long viewed with disdain by the party’s eastern elites.

Reagan’s challenge to then-President Gerald Ford in the 1976 primaries represented the next great antiestablishment challenge by the party’s conservative wing. That battle went all the way to the national convention in Kansas City, where Ford prevailed. When Ford lost the election to Jimmy Carter, Reagan and his anti-establishment conservatism laid claim to leadership of the party and eventually to the presidency.

In the eyes of anti-establishment Republicans, the election of George H.W. Bush in 1988 restored the establishment wing to power. Within two years there was another revolt, this one led by then-representative Newt Gingrich when Bush abandoned his pledge not to raise taxes as part of a controversial budget deal with the Democrats.

The 1990 rebellion contributed to Bush’s defeat to Bill Clinton in 1992. Two years after that, the Gingrich-led forces swept to power in the House in 1994, Gingrich became Speaker, and the balance again swung away from the establishment.

Six years later, after Gingrich and his revolution faltered and he had left the speakership, the establishment reasserted itself when Texas’s then-Gov. George W. Bush was elected president. “We reverted to the norm and the old order came back again,” Gingrich said.

“Trump stood up and said in effect [to the white working class], these Republican elites, they haven’t done squat for you,” Galston said.” If you want someone who will stand up and defend your values and interests, here I am.”

Gingrich, who felt the sting of the Republican establishment in 2012 when he was challenging Romney in the GOP primaries, sees those condemning Trump and his followers as blind to the genuine anger around the country — at Obama in particular and also at the Republican leadership.

You have a party that mishandled the economic collapse, an elite leadership that failed to reform things, an attitude of arrogance to the very tea party people who wanted to change things,” he said. “The people in the imperial capital cannot understand why everyone in the rest of the country is offended by sending money to the imperial capital.”

Gingrich said he believes Trump could become an effective ally of conservatism as a reform president. But to many in the party, Trump and his following represents what Galston called “the first popularly based challenge within the Republican Party to basic conservative premises since Reagan.

That’s why so many in the party are so worried at this moment. “There is nothing trivial about this, and it may result be a real rending of the party,” Weber said. “But I don’t think it means the death of the party. If worst comes to worst, which I hope doesn’t happen, I think the recovery will be faster than people think.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/behind-the-rise-of-trump-long-standing-grievances-among-left-out-voters/2016/03/05/7996bca2-e253-11e5-9c36-e1902f6b6571_story.html

HAPPY2BME

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Re: How the Republican Party created Donald Trump
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2016, 05:05:08 pm »

How a fractured field just might block Trump and force a brokered convention


A sense of urgency

The next two weeks will be crucial for the Stop Trump effort. Nearly 400 delegates are up for grabs before March 14. After that day, states will no longer be required to allocate their delegates proportionally. This rule change will help the leading candidate — presumably Trump — emerge from the pack and win the nomination. Until March 14, though, the rest of the field should be able to collectively keep pace with Trump if he continues to win similar percentages of primary votes.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/2016-election/primaries/trump-versus-the-field/

HAPPY2BME

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Re: How the Republican Party created Donald Trump
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2016, 06:23:12 pm »
Like it or not, the people clearly like Trump. The GOP now faces a “teachable moment” of their own design. There’s probably a lesson in there for the Democrats, too; but they’re even more obtuse than the GOP. The hell with them.

The people’s Donald

Barring a backroom deal which would break several records for wire pull-ery, Donald Trump will be the 2016 Republican nominee for president of the United States. Unless Senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio and Governor John Kasich pull off a show-stopper worthy of one of Trump’s own memoirs, they’re going to be submitting resumes to Trump’s vice presidential search team.

Forget the “experts.” Flush the “prognosticators.” Tell the talking heads to take a long walk off a short pier. The people have spoken. And Donald Trump is their man. The GOP threw everything but the kitchen sink at him; and then he used Super Tuesday to drag them out back and smack the tar out of them. And judging by the polling results, the people didn’t just watch; they held the GOP down.

As far as I’m concerned, the Republicans have no one to blame but themselves. Seven years of talking tough on camera and then batting their eyes at President Obama behind closed doors created Trump. Seven years of playing defense for the banksters created Trump. Seven years of keeping their foot in the door for every northbound illegal alien created Trump. They can either take Trump’s ascendancy as the lesson in humility they needed, or they can stand as bridesmaids at another Trump wedding.

Whatever you might think of Trump as a candidate or a man, there’s no denying his campaign has been nothing short of a masterwork. He correctly identified that the public’s dissatisfaction with congress was less an endorsement of Obama and more an indictment of the Republicans’ failure to drop the curtain on his dance across the Bill of Rights. Trump exploited the gap between the Republicans’ rhetoric and the Republicans’ action, and caught them so blind-sided that he left them looking out their ear holes.

But that gap only existed because the Republicans refused to fill it. A deal was there to be made, and making deals is kind of Trump’s “thing.” And the people are buying what he’s selling. Judging by the Super Tuesday returns, Trump is not only piling up delegates, he’s piling up believers. While Hillary Clinton’s jalopy of a campaign sputtered past Bernie Sanders’ wheezing mule, Trump rocketed past the field like an F-18 buzzing the Democrats’ horse-drawn caravan of crusty old white people. While Democrats found better things to do with their time than mash the button for one of their party’s dogs, Republicans lined up for Trump like people used to line up for the Rolling Stones before they got all old and weird. With vote totals on the Republican side exceeding even 2008 levels, Trump can make a legitimate case for being the most energizing candidate since Ronald Reagan rocked the house in 1980.

Trump took Obama’s imperiousness and the Republicans’ cowardice and gave the people an alternative. Granted, some serious questions about what that alternative actually entails remain glaringly unanswered. But the GOP hasn’t provided a worthwhile answer to Obama’s errors despite control of congress and most of the state houses and governor’s mansions. Trump has built a considerable pile of money knowing precisely what to offer in return for future returns. His occasionally-spotty record of delivering said returns have clearly dampened neither his love for deal-making nor the number of people lining up to make one with him. Whatever a potential Trump presidency might entail, it won’t be Obama, nor will it be some weak-kneed RINO. And the record crush of voters casting ballots for Trump while turnout for the Democrats got worse ratings than the Oscars suggests it won’t be Hillary Clinton, either.

So take a good look, Republicans. To further mangle one of Obama’s already-tortured enunciations, “you built that.” The people asked, chided, cajoled and begged for an active operation against Obama and the Democrats in the increasingly ugly and even violent war on liberty. And you responded with field generals like Mitt Romney, John Boehner and Mitch McConnell. Even now, as the door to the 2016 nominations swings closed, Romney has risen like the ghost of nominees past to snipe at Trump from behind a hastily set up press conference. It’s telling that a two-time loser would take cheap shots at Trump on the practice field after failing to make the varsity – twice – rather than learn the lesson that the people are tired of career politicians and their repetitive, losing banter.

Like it or not, the people clearly like Trump. The GOP now faces a “teachable moment” of their own design. There’s probably a lesson in there for the Democrats, too; but they’re even more obtuse than the GOP. The hell with them.

http://personalliberty.com/the-peoples-donald/