After I read Joshua Green’s reporting in Bloomberg, I had to check to see if there is an echo in here.
But Trump’s broad popularity and enduring strength among Republicans lend credence to a different interpretation: that his candidacy has become the preferred vehicle for Republican voters to express maximal outrage at their own party’s leaders for failing to carry out the agenda they keep promising. It’s one that many conservatives ardently desire: to deport undocumented immigrants, kill Obamacare, overturn Roe v. Wade, and return the GOP to a position of primacy in American politics.
“If you look at the whole Republican Party, from libertarians to evangelicals to the Tea Party,” says Steele, “you have a group of people who’ve been lied to for 35 years. Republican [presidential candidates] have said, ‘Elect us and we’ll do these things.’ Well, they haven’t. And that frustration is manifesting itself in Trump.”
Now, Michael Steele took over as chairman of the Republican National Committee ten days after Barack Obama took the oath of office on January 20th, 2009, and Steele stayed in his position until the January after the stunning 2010 midterms. In other words, he ran the Republican Party during the height of the Tea Party backlash. And his job was primarily to hobnob with very wealthy Republican donors and get them to give his organization cash. He’s seen this clash of cultures in an up-close-and-personal way that few others can match.
And notice something important: he said that three kinds of Republicans have been persistently led on and lied to over the course of 35 years, which happens to coincide precisely with the rise of Ronald Reagan and the seeming triumph of the Conservative Movement.
But the group he didn’t mention were the businessmen. He didn’t mention the Chamber of Commerce types. He didn’t say that the big donors he courted were misled and left without anything to show for their support.
No, it was only the evangelicals who kept thinking that the rich businessmen who really run the GOP want their wives and daughters to live in a country with the same rights enjoyed by women in Francisco Franco’s Spain. And the libertarians who thought anyone was serious about shuttering the Department of Education. And the Tea Party folks who took that deficit spending nonsense literally.
These folks have been served several lines of bullshit for a very long time, and it’s coming to a head now. The business folks want transportation spending and free trade and more defense spending and to pay our bills, and they don’t give a shit about Benghazi or Obamacare or Planned Parenthood or gay marriage. They’re sick and tired of the base of the party asking for government shutdowns constantly and preventing their Republican Congress from doing business as usual.
You can call this Frankenstein’s monster or whatever you want to call it, but I think Michael Steele hit the nail right on the head.
And he would know.
How ironic, then, that a businessman like Trump would be the one to capture the resulting anger and bring the ruse clearly into the light?