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Writer's pictureHowie Klein

Is Trump Enough Of An Albatross To Lose The Midterms For The GOP?


Poster by Chip Proser

This afternoon, Trump was on the attack again-- not just against Democrats, but also against McConnell and any Republican who doesn't kiss his ass with enough passion and devotion. All Republicans who refuse to kiss Trump's ass are labeled RINOs. Most real conservatives consider Trump a RINO whose only concern is himself, not the GOP and not the USA. But his cult stands strongly behind him. And conservatives deserve what they get from him for collaborating with him and continuing to nurture him. In a statement he released this afternoon, Trump poisoned the already fragile atmosphere for a bipartisan infrastructure bill: "So sad to see certain RINO Republican Senators go back and forth to the White House and continually get nothing for infrastructure or anything else. When will they learn that they are being played with, and used by, the Radical Left-- and only bad things can happen. Should have never lost the Senate in the first place, thanks Mitch! New leadership is needed, and fast!"


McConnell dismissed him as a creature of the past but in reality, several of the gutless wonders who are needed to give Biden the 10 Republican votes he'll need for cloture, are less likely to vote for it, knowing that Trump is now paying attention to something he has never weighed in on before.


Early this morning, long before Trump's statement, Roll Call published a piece by Walter Shapiro, The man who will never go away-- Donald Trump is back, possibly at his party’s peril. No doubt it gave McConnell cramps when he read it. "Saturday night," wrote Shapiro, "Trump lured everyone back to his alternative universe of crazed conspiracies about a 'rigged' election. His 91-minute speech in Wellington, Ohio, was the start of his vengeance tour against Republicans like nearby Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, who voted to impeach Trump for fomenting the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.


Equally predictable, but far more devastating, is the beginning of the onslaught of books featuring dramatic scenes from inside the Trump Oval Office. We have, of course, had articles and books like this before, but this time around the sources are finally talking on-the-record instead of lurking in the shadows.
The Atlantic published on Sunday a chilling excerpt from ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl’s forthcoming book, Betrayal, about the end times of the Trump presidency. Instead of Richard Nixon drunkenly talking to the portraits in the White House in The Final Days, we have the 45th president, his face bloated with rage, shouting at his attorney general, William Barr, “You must hate Trump. You must hate Trump.”
Barr’s candid interviews with Karl have been characterized as a Trump toady’s last-ditch efforts to salvage his reputation. But Barr’s motivations-- which presumably are not based on his dedication to truth, justice and the American Way-- do not undermine the narrative power of his tale.
The attorney general’s purported disloyalty came when he displayed a belated flicker of moxie in telling The Associated Press in an interview that there was no compelling evidence or legal justification to overturn Joe Biden’s election.
According to Karl, the catalyst for Barr’s truth-telling was a series of desperate pleas from Mitch McConnell, urging him to do something to save the two Republicans on the Jan. 5 ballot in the Georgia Senate runoffs. McConnell feared that Trump’s rants about a stolen election would muddle the GOP message in Georgia.
Yes, we have another example to insert in the McConnell chapter in any future edition of Profiles in Courage.
McConnell, who confirmed the anecdotes in Karl’s excerpt, did not want his fingerprints on any effort to uphold the legitimacy of the 2020 election. Instead, his devilishly clever notion was for Barr to do the dirty work for him-- and make the attorney general the focus of Trump’s rage.
McConnell’s actual words to Barr should be included in every future profile of the supposed Machiavellian genius that is the Senate GOP leader: “Look, we need the president in Georgia, and so we cannot be frontally attacking him now. But you’re in a better position to inject some reality into this situation.”
Throughout Trump’s presidency, McConnell kept thinking that he could placate an erratic, ego-mad president with one more piece of his soul. With each payment, McConnell naively believed he could go back to his single-minded agenda of rubber-stamping conservative Republican judges.
Blessed in 2018 with the most favorable Senate map in memory (26 Democratic-held seats were on the ballot and just 9 GOP seats), McConnell expected to win a lasting, unassailable majority. Instead, the GOP picked up a net of just two seats that year, a paltry gain that eventually made possible Chuck Schumer’s current status as Senate majority leader.
The difference-maker: Donald J. Trump.
Virtually everything the president did in 2018 and 2020 had the inadvertent result of fueling record Democratic turnout. By never standing up to Trump, Republicans like McConnell allowed him to continue as a human wrecking ball trying to destroy everyone-- including Republicans-- who stood in his way.
The Ohio rally illustrated a truth that should have been obvious from the beginning: Trump will never willingly give up the limelight.
Bristling with resentments, Trump, who never pledged allegiance to anyone other than his own reflection in the mirror, is happy to fight a two-front war against disloyal Republicans and the Democratic Party.
No former president since Richard Nixon in 1974 has been a major factor in off-year congressional elections after he left office.
But Trump in 2022 promises to be the exception-- and nothing could make the Democrats happier. Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, an old-fashioned Republican who is retiring next year, said Sunday on ABC News that Trump is “definitely the leader” of the GOP.
This week, members of Congress-- and, yes, mostly their staff members-- will be putting the final touches on patriotic remarks to be delivered over the Fourth of July weekend.
What better time for timorous Republicans to come forward and say, “I have looked closely at the evidence. And on this weekend of celebration of 245 years of American democracy, I want to tell you that Joe Biden was honestly elected and is the legitimate president of the United States.”
For most congressional Republicans (legislators like Marjorie Taylor Greene fall in a special category), this would merely be the public acknowledgement of what they have known since all the Trump lawsuits challenging the election were rejected by both Republican- and Democratic-appointed jurists.
By not standing up to Trump even now, congressional Republicans will be doomed to spend 2022 defending his deranged conspiracy theories. By Election Day 2022, Trump will probably be talking about how little green men flying undetected in UFOs altered the ballots to elect Biden.
American patriotism through the ages has been linked with courage. This is the perfect weekend for congressional Republicans to show it with more than just empty platitudes about the Founding Fathers.

Trump's own 4th of July speech, scheduled for Mobile, Alabama was cancelled today after USS Alabama Battleship Memorial Park commissioners figured out that Trump's planned appearance "was going to be a partisan political event, rather than just a patriotic event planned for that evening." Another factor that may have gone into the decision was Trump's refusal to pay for the needed extra police in advance, even though he is known for stiffing every city that he speaks in for the costs.

1 Comment


dcrapguy
dcrapguy
Jun 30, 2021

ah, the wishful thinking/delusion piece for the day.


trump will only keep his 74 million (and counting) nazi voters/cultists/fetishists animated. this will HELP in the midterms in red states and districts. full stop.


the only thing that can help democraps in all other places (they're toast in red areas already) is to pass useful reforms to fix some of the evil shit the nazis (and democraps) have done since 1980. And THAT ain't happening! the 2020 democrap legacy will be one and only one thing: they'll defend the filibuster to the very end.


so... it kinda all adds up to a democrap slaughter just like 2010. don't it?

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