Connect with us

Politics

Column: Is Trump losing his mojo? Several of his candidates are struggling in primaries

Published

on

Column: Is Trump losing his mojo? Several of his candidates are struggling in primaries

Working for governor as a disciple of Donald Trump, Janice McGeachin has performed virtually every little thing in need of surgically connect herself to the previous president.

It’s not simply that Trump is omnipresent in her promoting, or that McGeachin mimics his flame-throwing rhetoric. She’s additionally modeled Trump’s flamboyantly defiant habits, difficult Gov. Brad Little, a fellow Republican, within the upcoming main and, as lieutenant governor, performing to overturn his insurance policies when he left Idaho.

The reward for McGeachin’s efficiency is Trump’s “Full and Complete Endorsement,” which adopted her pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago and makes Little one in all solely two Republican governors within the nation looking for reelection to be overtly opposed by the ex-president.

Advertisement

Not that the endorsement — make that Complete Endorsement appears to be doing a lot good. Lower than two months earlier than the Could 17 main, McGeachin (pronounced Mick-GHEE-hin) is combating for credibility and traction in a race that polls present her dropping badly.

She shouldn’t be alone in dealing with these troublesome straits.

Trump coaxed former Georgia Sen. David Perdue into the Republican main in opposition to Brian Kemp after the governor dedicated the heresy of refusing to overturn Joe Biden’s victory within the state. However Perdue can also be struggling forward of the Could 24 GOP main, as are candidates Trump endorsed in Senate primaries in North Carolina and Alabama.

All of which suggests Trump’s sway over Republican voters — and, by extension, the Republican Celebration — is diminishing the additional he will get from the White Home.

“A president’s endorsement goes to hold extra weight than an ex-president’s endorsement,” stated Q. Whitfield Ayres, a GOP strategist with intensive expertise in congressional and gubernatorial races nationwide. “Particularly an ex-president with out entry to Twitter and social media.”

Advertisement

Polls replicate the waning of Trump’s affect.

A January survey by NBC Information discovered that greater than half — 56% — of Republicans interviewed described themselves as extra supportive of the GOP than Trump personally, whereas 36% noticed themselves as extra supportive of Trump than the Republican Celebration.

That’s a near-total reversal from 2020, when 54% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents stated they thought-about themselves extra supportive of Trump than the get together and 38% had been extra supportive of the GOP than Trump.

In a separate measure, a Quinnipiac Ballot final month confirmed, by a 52%-36% margin, Republicans sided with Mike Pence over Trump on the query of whether or not the previous vp may have overturned the 2020 presidential election, as Trump urged.

After all, a lot may change earlier than Republicans vote in Could. But when Idaho — a state Trump gained by almost 2-to-1 over Joe Biden — is any indication, it’s going to take greater than a blessing from the previous president to spice up his most well-liked candidates into workplace.

Advertisement

Points matter and so, most particularly, does the standard of every candidate.

Little, 68, an affable third-generation rancher and former head of the Idaho Assn. of Commerce and Trade, is a residing embodiment of the business-oriented pragmatic conservatism that has lengthy held sway right here.

As governor, he’s reduce taxes and rules and stored a light-weight hand through the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed companies to remain open through the worst outbreaks however pitched the healthcare system into disaster for a number of months.

His reelection technique basically quantities to doing his job and ignoring McGeachin.

On Tuesday, Little appeared within the governor’s ceremonial workplace — marble columns, gold material, huge Western oil work — to announce “a brand new on-line, one-stop store” to search out public assembly info for the state’s govt department companies.

Advertisement

Standing earlier than a financial institution of cameras, Little additionally labored in a lighthearted reference to his aggressive deregulation efforts, saying anybody who didn’t know his file was “residing on a overseas planet.”

For her half, McGeachin, 59, was a mainstream conservative throughout a decade within the Legislature earlier than reworking herself — like many looking for alternative and development within the Trump period — into an acolyte of the person she calls “the best president of our lifetime.”

Her marketing campaign has consisted largely of attention-seeking stunts, with COVID-19 the wedge she’s used to interrupt from Little. (The 2 had been elected individually, not as working mates.)

On two events when the governor left the state, McGeachin used her short-term authority to problem govt orders prohibiting localities from implementing masks mandates and testing and vaccine necessities. Little instantly reversed her actions and secured an opinion from the state legal professional normal limiting McGeachin’s powers in his absence.

The governor, for good measure, additionally stopped telling the lieutenant governor his journey plans.

Advertisement

Recently, McGeachin’s candidacy has additional degenerated.

She has been defending her choice to handle a white supremacist gathering in Florida — which put her within the firm of extremist GOP Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar — and gone on the assault in opposition to authorities over a mistreated 10-month-old being taken from his household and put in protecting custody.

(The kid is the grandson of a marketing campaign guide for Ammon Bundy, the militant right-wing activist, who’s working for Idaho governor as an impartial. McGeachin referred to as the motion “medical tyranny.”)

For years now, Idaho has been one of many fastest-growing states within the nation, experiencing a increase that’s not solely carpeted the panorama with new subdivisions but additionally modified the tenor of its politics.

A number of the new arrivals are conservative refugees from blue states like California, who thrill to the pugnacious type of politics that Trump personifies and others emulate. Their affect could be seen on the native stage and, more and more, when legislators collect beneath the Capitol dome.

Advertisement

However there stays a good portion of the Republican Celebration that prefers a extra sensible and achievement-oriented strategy.

“There’s nonetheless an old style sense of propriety,” stated Shea Andersen, a Boise communications strategist who’s backing Little’s reelection. “Competence issues and dignity and habits matter.”

Throughout Trump’s presidency it was frequent to listen to supporters say they appreciated his insurance policies even when they didn’t a lot take care of his character or provocations.

A main victory by Little would counsel that given the prospect to have one with out the opposite — the accomplishments with out the antics — a majority of Republican voters will take it.

That would have implications not simply in 2022, but when Trump seeks the GOP nomination once more in 2024.

Advertisement

Politics

Kari Lake to hold 'Democrats for Lake' event after Democrats tout Republican support for Harris, Gallego

Published

on

Kari Lake to hold 'Democrats for Lake' event after Democrats tout Republican support for Harris, Gallego

Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

GOP Arizona Senate candidate Kari Lake announced Tuesday an event that will feature current and former Democrats supporting her campaign.

The coalition, called “Democrats/former Democrats for Kari Lake & America First,” was revealed after Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign announced its “Republicans for Harris” initiative, which held a press conference in Mesa, Arizona, and after Lake’s opponent for Senate, Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., announced his “Republicans and Independents for Ruben” coalition.

Advertisement

Lake called on members of the press to give her event, which will be held Thursday, as much coverage as the events for Harris and Gallego.

‘NEVER TRUMPERS’ COALESCE BEHIND DEM TICKET IN REPUBLICANS FOR HARRIS CAMPAIGN

GOP Arizona Senate candidate Kari Lake announced Tuesday an event that will feature current and former Democrats supporting her campaign. (Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)

“Hello Media— We see how you have given Kamala and her favorite liberal congressman Ruben Gallego so much news coverage of their ‘Republicans’ for Kamala/Ruben/America Last press conferences,” Lake wrote on the social media platform X.

“We ask that you give us equal coverage of our event coming Thursday. It’s called Democrats/former Democrats for Kari Lake & America First,” she continued. “Clear your schedule and we’ll let you know the time/place to meet us. I promise this will be eye-opening.”

Advertisement

Gallego announced on Sunday endorsements from 40 Republicans and independents, including officials and operatives who have shown support for other Democrats, in an effort to prove he has appeal across the aisle as he seeks to defeat Lake in November, according to The Arizona Republic.

KARI LAKE WINS GOP NOD, SETTING UP GENERAL ELECTION BATTLE WITH GALLEGO FOR SINEMA’S SEAT

Kari Lake

Lake called on members of the press to give her event, which will be held Thursday, as much coverage as the events for Harris and Gallego. (Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)

At least 10 of these supporters for Gallego have also endorsed Harris for president, the outlet noted.

Republicans for Harris, consisting of “Never Trumpers,” also officially launched on Sunday, in an initiative that features several former officials, including former Trump White House officials Stephanie Grisham and Olivia Troye, as Harris’ campaign looks to rebrand her more moderately ahead of November’s presidential election against former President Trump.

Advertisement

Lake and Gallego will also face off in the general election in November. Arizona’s open Senate seat, currently held by outgoing Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, is rated as “Lean Democratic” by non-partisan political handicapper the Cook Political Report.

Continue Reading

Politics

Column: Trump is trolling the Democratic Party about Harris' mixed-race identity. Will it work?

Published

on

Column: Trump is trolling the Democratic Party about Harris' mixed-race identity. Will it work?

In 2020, I wrote a column about Kamala Harris’ mixed-race identity in which I made the case that a lack of critical thinking on race would make it easier for unscrupulous politicians to manipulate voters.

Four years later, that theory is being put to the test. Onstage last week at the National Assn. of Black Journalists convention, former President Trump tried to raise questions about the authenticity of the vice president’s identity, implying she had changed races to get votes.

Trump is perhaps the last person on Earth whose racial commentary I’d take seriously. What he said was not just juvenile but obviously insincere. In modern internet parlance, he is outrage farming, trolling, speaking disingenuously purely to get a response. And I have to ask: Is it working?

Even such a transparent attempt to discourage Black and South Asian voters from supporting Harris has sparked understandably furious reactions. His comments were crudely delivered to an audience of Black journalists, a context that added insult to injury.

Now, even though no liberal I know would be seriously swayed by Trump’s racial analysis (if you can call it that) we are trapped in the news cycle he has created. And I begrudge every second spent taking Trump’s trolling seriously. Harris was born to a Black father and Indian mother, so she is Black and Indian. I won’t go through an analysis of why people born to parents with two races are both of those races rather than one, because it doesn’t need to be explained.

Advertisement

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a Zeta Phi Beta sorority gathering July 24 in Indianapolis.

(Darron Cummings / Associated Press)

This isn’t critical race theory. This is just the birds and the bees. This is one plus one equals two.

When Harris appeared on “Asian Enough,” a podcast I co-hosted for the Los Angeles Times, she expressed impatience with the demand that she articulate a journey of racial discovery, namely because she believes she didn’t have any such story to tell.

Advertisement

“I didn’t go through some evolution about, ‘Who am I, and what is my identity,’” Harris said. “I guess the frustration I have is that people think that I should have gone through such a crisis and need to explain it.”

I understand if you’re skeptical of this story because it is too convenient, too aspirational, too uncontroversial. Sure, Harris’ childhood probably wasn’t a post-racial dream, no more than former President Obama’s. But if there’s any place in America where a child may have grown up with secure attachments to both halves of a mixed-race identity, it would probably be Northern California in the 1970s, one of the most diverse and progressive places in the nation.

And I never truly expected her to racially triangulate herself on our podcast. I expected her to do what every politician has ever done, which is present the identity that is most likely to win votes. When Trump is the alternative, why take the risk?

It’s more important to me to analyze the assumptions behind Trump’s trolling. Namely, that in America you’re supposed to vote for whoever will put the most money in your pocket. And you’re supposed to believe that the person most likely to put the most money in your pocket is someone who is the same race as you.

That implies that a vote is not a democratic act but a transaction, like trying to pick the bank or credit card with the best terms and perks. It recasts America as not a country but a company, where voters choose not just a leader but a CEO, the best one being one from our own tribe.

Advertisement
Kamala Harris holds a hand to her chest as she speaks at a rally with "Harris for President" on a sign behind her

Vice President Kamala Harris, pictured July 30 in Atlanta, told an L.A. Times podcast in 2020: “I didn’t go through some evolution about, ‘Who am I, and what is my identity.’ I guess the frustration I have is that people think that I should have gone through such a crisis and need to explain it.”

(John Bazemore / Associated Press)

It’s a piece of conventional wisdom, “voting your pocketbook.” But am I supposed to believe the bizarre conclusion that my lot in life improves because Harris is part Indian and, in America, we are both considered Asian American, and thus some benefit will flow to me?

We have to ask ourselves why Trump is trying to convince us that one plus one does not equal two. Who benefits from rigid tribalism about racial identity?

Definitely Trump and his supporters. But also, anyone who doesn’t want to spend time or resources thinking about or dealing with race.

Advertisement

Whether that’s campaigns that are content with one photo-op per race, no more, or politicians whose racial outreach ends at placing one person of each race in the backdrop of their speech. We are easier to marginalize and to pacify if we fold ourselves into such tiny boxes.

We have to resist that flattening wherever we see it. Treat Trump’s comments as you would those of any other online troll: Forget them, as soon as possible.

Continue Reading

Politics

Defense Secretary Austin taken by surprise upon news of 9/11 plea deals: 'Not consulted'

Published

on

Defense Secretary Austin taken by surprise upon news of 9/11 plea deals: 'Not consulted'

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was surprised by news of a deal struck between prosecutors and the mastermind and two others who planned the Sept. 11 attacks. 

“This is not something that the secretary was consulted on,” Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters during a Monday briefing. “We were not aware that the prosecution or defense would enter the terms of the plea agreement.”

The Biden administration revoked the deal amid public outrage and anger from loved ones of the victims. 

PHILADELPHIA MAYOR’S SOCIAL MEDIA VIDEO SPARKS SPECULATION OF LEAKED KAMALA HARRIS RUNNING MATE

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin testifies before a Senate Appropriations Committee on Capitol Hill. Austin revoked a plea deal between three terrorists who planned the Sept. 11 attacks and the government.  (Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press)

Advertisement

“He believes that the families and the American public deserve the opportunity to see military commission trials carried out in this case,” said Singh.

Austin revoked the agreement last week after prosecutors agreed to move forward with the deal that would have taken the death penalty off the table for 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammad, and collaborators Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarak Bin ‘Attash, and Mustafa Ahmed Adam al Hawsawi. 

The defendants are being held at a military installation in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. 

“Effective immediately, in the exercise of my authority, I hereby withdraw from the three pretrial agreements that you signed on July 31, 2024,” a letter from Austin states. 

That decision was made by retired brigadier general and senior Defense Department official Susan Escallier, whom Austin had tapped to serve in the Office of Military Commissions (OMC), the New York Post reported.

Advertisement

LAWMAKERS, FAMILIES OF 9/11 VICTIMS REACT TO PLEA DEAL WITH TERRORISTS: ‘SLAP IN THE FACE’

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed

Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, a suspected al-Qaeda terrorist, is shown in this photo released by the FBI October 10, 2001, in Washington, D.C. Mohammed was arrested at a house in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. It was reported October 21, 2003, that U.S. officials believe Mohammed killed Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan.  (Getty Images)

No explanation was given on why this was not settled earlier before the deals were signed off and publicly released.

The deal shocked the loved ones of the 9/11 victims as well as lawmakers who blamed Biden for going easy on the terrorists. 

“They’re the ones that want this off of their plate. It’s an election year,” Terry Strada, the national chair of 9/11 Families United, told Fox News Digital. “They (terrorists) committed this heinous crime against the United States. They should have faced the charges, faced the trial and faced the punishment. Since when do the people responsible for murder get to call the shots?”

National security adviser Jake Sullivan said the Biden administration did not play a role in the now-dead plea bargain.

Advertisement
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan addresses reporters from the White House podium

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 1. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

“This is not something that we were involved in,” Jean-Pierre told reporters last week. 

“We had no role in that process. The president had no role. The vice president had no role. I had no role. The White House had no role,” Sullivan said in a Thursday press briefing. “And we were informed yesterday — the same day that they went out publicly — that this pretrial agreement had been accepted by the convening authority.”

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending