QuickTidal, on 18 June 2020 - 11:41 AM, said:
Can someone in the know about US politics tell me what happens to the existing Republican Party if Trump loses. Like do we think they will all unhitch their wagons from the notions of his base and try to move away from it? Do they double down? I understand that some of that (perhaps lots of that) will have to do with the Democrats getting majority in the Senate, or getting McConnell voted out....becuase they'd probably fear nothing if they still ruled the senate...but let's say Trump loses in Nov, and the Senate becomes much more even on R VS D numbers...do some of the less staunch defenders bail? Or are they too deep now?
They can't move away from Trump's base. That's their base. Without it they don't have voters. Trump is the result of decades of the GOP red-baiting and race-baiting until finally the voters got sick of GOP politicians not being nearly as nasty as they promised to be. There's no turning back from that.
The Project Lincoln folks are really something else. They (perhaps especially Rick Wilson) created this mess and now they want out. They thought they could string racist whites along with dogwhistling and empty promises and now that the base has produced someone more to their own liking, the party goons are stuck holding the bill.
Post-2012, there was a lot of speculation about the end of the GOP. They even produced an internal "autopsy" report, stressing how much they needed to focus on inclusiveness for the party to survive. What seemed likely then was that the GOP would die and the left would fracture to produce a left-right division more similar to what you see in the rest of the world, but then Hillary Clinton decided it was a good idea to run again, despite the left knowing better in 2008 and going with the black guy who, despite the enormous racial tension in this country, was far less controversial than her. So here we are. 8 years of a black president stoked those racial tensions so high, we got Trump, and the Democrats ran one of the least popular politicians in living memory against him. His victories in the primary gave the "silent majority" of racist trash more confidence than they have had in decades. He energized them, and exposed the GOP base for what it is, for those who did not already know.
The President (2012) said:
Please proceed, Governor.
Chris Christie (2016) said:
Elizabeth Warren (2020) said:
And no, I’m not talking about Donald Trump. I’m talking about Mayor Bloomberg.