What finally provoked this significant, and long overdue, development? Not surprisingly, it was Trump himself. In a statement issued a week ago, he once again condemned his vice-president, Mike Pence, for having failed to overturn Joe Biden’s election victory, saying, “Mike Pence did have the right to change the outcome.”
At a rally in Texas, Trump repeated his claims about the “rigged election”, promised to pardon the January 6 rioters if re-elected as president, and urged his supporters to stage “the biggest protests we have ever had in Washington DC, New York, and Atlanta” in order to block the various ongoing investigations into his political conduct and financial affairs. Only someone as delusional as Trump could seriously believe that inciting further January 6 style riots would assist his ailing political career and not provoke a backlash within the Republican party.
Then last week, the Republican National Committee, no doubt at Trump’s urging, issued a statement condemning Republican politicians Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger for merely sitting on the committee inquiring into the events surrounding the January 6 insurrection. The statement described the Washington riot as “legitimate political discourse”. This crude and unprincipled attack had Trump’s fingerprints all over it. After all, he had previously justified the rioters’ chants of “Kill Pence ” by saying, “Well, the people were angry.”
Mitt Romney aptly described the RNC’s statement as “a shame” on the party. Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski said the statement was “absolutely wrong”, adding, “I am not going to keep my mouth shut… my responsibility is to speak the truth.”
Then on Friday, Mike Pence responded to these provocative acts in a speech delivered to the Federalist Society in Florida. Invoking God, John Adams, and the sanctity of the Constitution, Pence launched a direct attack on Trump, saying, “Trump is wrong. I had no right to overturn the election. The presidency belongs to the American people alone. Frankly there is almost nothing more un-American than the notion that any one person could choose the American president.”
Pence correctly categorised Trump’s views as “a violation of the Constitution” and reiterated that “January 6 was a dark day…. we did our duty that day.”
On Sunday, Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio publically supported Pence’s views on the issue of whether he had the power to overturn the election result.
The are other recent events which indicate that Trump’s influence within the party is waning. Republican powerbroker Lindsey Graham recently warmly endorsed Biden’s preferred black female nominee for the Supreme Court vacancy, and anti-Trump Republican candidates for the upcoming mid-term elections have been attracting substantial financial support for their campaigns.
There can be little doubt that the bitter public infighting within the Republican Party that has broken out will continue apace, and that Trump will eventually be driven out of the party. That in itself, though, is no cause for celebration.
Trump’s downfall as a major political figure may be imminent, but ‘Trumpism’ – the broader populist political movement that pre-dated his entry into politics, and that he took charge of and cynically used to become president – will not disappear with him.
Read more
Widespread populist disenchantment and anger are now permanent features of the American political landscape. That is so because Trumpism, in the wider sense of the term, is a manifestation of legitimate distress and discontent created by the grotesquely unfair and dysfunctional society that America has become over the past 50 years.
And the ‘power elite’ and Republican grandees that are now busily disposing of Trump are incapable of even recognising, let alone alleviating, the intractable problems that plague American society. Nor can anything worthwhile be expected from the Democrats – one glance at the hapless Biden administration, presently seeking to provoke war with Russia, makes this perfectly clear.
America may have survived the Trump presidency with its political institutions relatively intact, but the emergence of a more potent and effective version of Trumpism in the future is all but inevitable. Such a populist political movement will eschew his purely opportunistic contempt for liberal democracy and the Constitution, and will be much more ideologically sophisticated than Trump ever was (“Make America Great Again” is not an ideology, it is just a trite slogan). It will probably be led by a politician of conviction who has learnt from Trump’s mistakes.
Trump, unfortunately, was probably just a crude and vulgar harbinger of an even bleaker American political future.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
Source