Donald Trump is probably going to lose,
and by most accounts, he's going to lose by a lot. This happens to
coincide with his party members jumping ship on him- an unholy
combination of Trumps decreasing popularity and his claim that he's
capable of handling women's crotches with impunity.
For Republican politicians, it's an
incredibly fine line. This man is the walking embodiment of
political Russian roulette. Un-endorsing the current presidential
nominee (and implicitly endorsing Hillary) could cost governors or senators or mayors
dearly in the eyes of today's all-or-nothing voter base. Supporting him means attaching your name to an unstable nuclear
reactor. The next thing he does (or the next thing he's discovered to
have done) could not only ruin his odds, his brand and his life- it
could also do the same to them. To those paying attention, the line he crossed seems hilariously arbitrary: This man has talked shit about Popes and prisoners of
war. He's been accused of sexual assault and peeping at underage women. He's made fun of a person with atypical arms and
advocated for killing children. But if you think that's bad, get this- one time, on a bus in
2005, he made a lame joke about grabbing vaginae. TUCK AND ROLL.
Actions are taken when the perception
of circumstances necessitates them, and conversely, the actions taken
indicate the perception of circumstances. When Republicans blasted away from Trump at warp-speed it was because they knew Trump had finally pussy grabbed
his way past salvation. The timing, though, didn't go unnoticed.
The implications, when you think about them, are insane: Somewhere, in a meeting room, somebodies political adviser has almost certainly said the phrase “Sure, voters were cool with lies, stupidity and advocating war crimes, but this Billy Bush situation is going to really piss them off.” Jump off the Titanic and hope to hell you can swim far enough away to avoid getting sucked down by the whirlpool.
The implications, when you think about them, are insane: Somewhere, in a meeting room, somebodies political adviser has almost certainly said the phrase “Sure, voters were cool with lies, stupidity and advocating war crimes, but this Billy Bush situation is going to really piss them off.” Jump off the Titanic and hope to hell you can swim far enough away to avoid getting sucked down by the whirlpool.
The question isn't so much whether or
not Trump's implosion will drag the whole party out to the
woodshed, because it probably won't. The only thing Trump supporters
hate more than a Democrat is a loser, and when Trump lies beaten and
broken, there probably won't be anyone willing to stick around.
Winning is what he has always claimed to be able to do, and he had a
flawless political record to back it up. This might be his first
campaign, but he's never lost a
campaign.
It's really how he got there in the
first place. He didn't come out of nowhere- before he was screaming
about the Mexican rapists and email servers and untenable plans for a wall,
he was a massive public figure. He was famous and successful on at
least a superficial level. In the beginning of a political career,
especially when starting at such a high level, name recognition
is everything, and Trump isn't just his name- it's his brand. Call it
the Trump tautology- he is a successful person because he is great,
and he is great because he is successful. It's a fun narrative, and it works, even if it the story isn't super conducive to words like “settlements” and
“divorce” and “bankruptcy”. It didn't matter until later, when words like "grab them by the pussy" got thrown in as well.
When he loses the election, he'll lose
some of his identity, and some of his brand sheen, and some of his
speculative wealth, if not actual. But this probably isn't good news.
As fun as it is to wallow in the irony,
there's always a backlash- if the GOP has done their job, the
narrative will change. Two years from now the story won't be that
Trump was the symbol of the party or its members or its backers, but
that he was just another washed-up jerk-off that crashed and burned,
while the rest of the party shook their heads. This means a
difficult task for anybody trying to link Trump to any future party
candidate.
In the upcoming elections where
Democratic candidates pay for commercials that show side by side
profiles of Trump and whichever white male they're trying to paint
him over, it won't stick: Trump himself will become the problem, not
the things he said. So once the election is over and they completely disown him, they'll guaranteed
their survival for at least a little bit. Their entire platform
exists as a contrarian position to people they can paint as bad guys,
and since the election is almost certainly going Hillary Clinton's
way, it doesn't look like they'll be running out of bad guys for at
least four more years.
Nobody who likes Trump now won't like
the next Trump. Even though their candidate will lose, So what?
They don't need to change their mindset, because it was their
candidate, not their ideals, that self destructed in the final weeks
of the campaign. There will still be a federal government in which
there is at least one Democratic representative or executive or
judge, meaning there's work to do.
What has become abundantly clear in
this election is that what people want isn't policy discussions- they
want wars of attrition, to see whose good luck and good publicity and
gaffe defenses can last long enough to inspire enough people to get
off the couch or spend a few minutes more on the drive home from work
to hit a voting booth. The name of the game is elimination, not
governing.
Even when the GOP had a majority in the
House and Senate after they won the absolute shit out of everything
in 2014, the actual act of governing was more like a snake pit under
a throw rug than an actual responsibility. Attempting to push policy
usually means somebody pushing back (arguably as our founders
intended.) Today, though, compromise is seen as failure- the fact that the
Democrats maintain the ability to resist equates to a GOP loss. And
if this election will teach us anything, it's that some people don't mind supporting psychopaths, but nobody would never support a
loser.
The Trump supporters aren't going
anywhere, even if he is. Trump didn't create the xenophobia or
resentment that his base nurtures- he simply gave them a flag to fly
over it, swam out, and rode the wave (right into the rocks). Trump
might lose a few billion dollars in brand value but the base isn't
going to fade into the background. If anything, they'll only become
more and more angry- and the anger will build, only to find a
candidate who is somewhat competent, and knows enough about elections
to not run for office when there's the possibility of somebody
digging up a recording of them bragging about trying to fuck married
women.
The classic problem of current identity
politics boils down to this: there is a party that claims to want to
help people by enacting policy, and there is a party that claims to
want to help people by first destroying the other party, then
figuring the rest out later (and honestly, who knows what the truth
actually is.) Oh, sure, there are certain stated policies, but ask
everyone in rural Illinois that owns a “make America great again”
hat about Trump's position on getting oil from OPEC and let me know
what they say- I imagine the vast majority of answers will involve a
shotgun.
But really, you can't blame them for
being angry. The political landscape was already bloated and ineffectual, and when news comes at you constantly, from every direction, then on the slight chance that any law gets
passed, the trickle-down is so staggeringly slow that the
conversation has pivoted five-hundred times, so that we don't know what
is and isn't the result of it. God forbid anyone we elect actually
takes the time to consider it, debate the minutiae of it, make it
better. Cooperation is for the weak, and that's how both parties
want it, apparently.
Try this at home- a copy of either
party's official platform and sip (SIP) a drink every time the
platform, which by definition is supposed to list the policies they
want enacted, mentions the opposition. Christ, you could probably
just subtract the specific number of policies from the total of times
one party blasts the other and you'd still be too wasted to walk.
Even if Democrats get ever-so-slightly more specific about the exact
actions they want the federal government to take, the reasoning
behind it never strays far from “because the other guys don't want
that.”
When Trump loses, the smarter Republicans will disappear for a minute. There's no plus side for Ted Cruz or Chris Christie or whoever to be seen shaking hands with people who claim the elections are rigged, even if they'll be slitting each others throats to make their message resonate louder with that same group in three years. At this point, fuck policy- it will be a full time job trying to retain the public image of being Trump without being Trump. Like it or not, in two and a half-ish years from today, we'll get to see what happens when GOP presidential hopefuls need to lean on the fervor of the Trump supporters of today- will they try to throw equal parts policy minutiae and loud-mouthed insanity into a blender, then splatter the result on the wall and figure the voters will go along with whatever, or will Trump go down in history as a prototype of the more suave politician that's willing to rub elbows with the post-deplorables?
When Trump loses, the smarter Republicans will disappear for a minute. There's no plus side for Ted Cruz or Chris Christie or whoever to be seen shaking hands with people who claim the elections are rigged, even if they'll be slitting each others throats to make their message resonate louder with that same group in three years. At this point, fuck policy- it will be a full time job trying to retain the public image of being Trump without being Trump. Like it or not, in two and a half-ish years from today, we'll get to see what happens when GOP presidential hopefuls need to lean on the fervor of the Trump supporters of today- will they try to throw equal parts policy minutiae and loud-mouthed insanity into a blender, then splatter the result on the wall and figure the voters will go along with whatever, or will Trump go down in history as a prototype of the more suave politician that's willing to rub elbows with the post-deplorables?
Today's Trumpers are now the main
driving force behind the dogma that, at one time, could be at least
superficially controlled by the overly emphatic patriotism and the
swirling speeches of whichever prominent white person was willing to
spend 24 days a month speaking at different county churches. Back then, the
racism was subtle, implied, never stated because as long as we
weren't “racist” like the Nazi's in The Blues Brothers, we
weren't really racist. But then there was Trump, who
presented racism not so much as mere demagoguery, but like one would
present a thesis. “When Mexico sends its people, they're not
sending their best. They're not sending you. They're bringing guns,
they're bringing crime, they're rapists, and some, I assume, are good
people.” He explicated the inner monologue of every bigot
everywhere. Give the guy some credit- he said it straight-forward
enough to mortify the planet, but with enough of a vague cop-out at
the end that it forced the GOP to jump in line behind him, lest they
lose out on some of that sweet, sweet vote from the batshit sect.
Unless we've all grossly underestimated
the size of the the “fuck it, let's just vote for this guy to see
what happens” crowd, we have to assume that one political loss in
one election year won't be enough to convince the “hang Hillary”
folk to address American politics on some sort of traditional “this
is what I think about what you think” level- the fire's already been
started, and there's no turning back. The monkey is out of the bag,
man, and it ain't going back in, unless the party gets enough of a
hold of itself to convince the Trumpers to shut the fuck up long
enough to convince enough Hillary 2020 voters that she's ineffectual,
so much so that they'll forget to vote on November 8th.
Then we're right back to where we
started before this entire shit-show nuked modern politics into
Fallout 4 territory. Four years from now we'll get to hear all of
this again, but in the GOP best case scenario, the voice will be
quieter, and probably not going on coked-out twitter rants at 4 in
the morning.
What will happen to Donald Trump?
Probably nothing. Almost certainly, he'll get lost in the
clusterfuck that will be the new era of the GOP sad-sacks trying to
shit on President Clinton 2: Electric Boogaloo's legacy, with
probably equally ineffective results. If we're lucky, he'll fade
into oblivion, making sure to preemptively check for microphones on
whoever he's cheating at golf or trying to fuck via a trip to the
furniture store. But if we're luckier, he'll remain in the public
eye, long enough to convince James Woods or whichever Baldwin brother
decides he has enough of a chance to carry on the crazy torch. If
the crazy train comes in again, well, at least now we know how to
deal with it- we simply won't deal with it, and let it destroy
itself. Grab some popcorn, enjoy the rest of the show, and pray we
get to talk about policy sometime before we die.
Here's my twitter. swellbo@gmail.com is my email. Say hello!
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