Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Mark Linsey's avatar

Wait...you're saying there's a primary race happening now?

Expand full comment
Joe Cronin's avatar

I'm going to take a slightly contrarian position to the general thrust of the comments here. I don't believe that "all Republicans love Trump" - not at all. He's a demagogue who has an extremely devoted following of people who have either gullibly fallen for his shtick or are just far-right politically. And that puts other Republicans - the folks MAGA-types like to call "RINOs" in a tough spot.

My belief is that there are plenty of moderate Republicans - including people in office right now - who would love to see Trump go away (whether that means prison or dead, doesn't really matter - whatever takes him out of the picture). But these people are in a tough position. If you're a Republican voter are you going to vote for Biden? Or any other Democrat? Or do you hold your nose and vote for Trump? Third-party isn't going to get it done and we all know that. I mean, all the RFK Jr talk revolves around whether his candidacy draws more votes from Biden or from Trump. No one thinks he can actually win.

If you're a candidate for, let's say the House, and you know you'll have a hard time winning your district if you alienate the MAGA folks, do you stand on principle, be honest and say "I don't like Trump and here's why" or do you pretend to back him (or at least stay as non-committal as possible)... just so you can get elected? These are politicians, so we probably can guess the answer there.

Ultimately I think the idea that all but one of the non-Trump candidates should get out. They won't, but it would present a chance to actually see if the Republicans are as bent on Trump as the Democrats believe they are. Right now all the Republicans who don't like Trump have a slew of people to choose from and it simply splits the "opposition" vote. Would a viable non-Trump candidate (and I agree with Nate that it's probably Haley or maybe DeSantis) actually be able to win some primaries in a one-on-one with Trump? My guess is yes. There are also probably some respondents who say Trump simply because he's leading. Why say I support Haley when she has no chance? Easier to go with the herd. Which of course feeds the narrative that Republicans love Trump.

If there were a Democrat who was also a very popular far-left demagogue, I suspect the Dems would have a similar problem. And in a way they do: because Biden's the incumbent, few Democrats would have the cojones to outright say he shouldn't run and back it up by challenging him the way Ted Kennedy did with Carter in 1980. Only RFK Jr did that this time around, and he got so little traction he went independent.

Expand full comment
106 more comments...