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In this edition: The Pence and Romney farewell tours, new GOP primary polls, and a squad member gets͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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October 31, 2023
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David Weigel

Mitt Romney and Mike Pence fought two different battles against Trumpism — with similar endings

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

THE SCENE

In November 2016, after Mike Pence had gotten closer to the White House than Mitt Romney ever would, the vice president-elect pulled him aside with some advice. Romney had just met with Donald Trump about serving as his secretary of state. Getting there would be tough. But Romney could improve his odds if he groveled.

“It would be really helpful if you went out to the media after this meeting,” Pence told Romney, “and just said you were wrong, and that what you’ve learned has given you much more confidence in him being president.”

Romney didn’t do it. He described the conversation, years later, to author McKay Coppins, whose biography of the Utah senator landed just as Pence wrapped up his 2024 campaign. Both men ended their careers in Republican politics by defying Trump, both after deciding that there was no moral or legal way to go along with his demands.

Pence’s exit, and Romney’s bridge-burning cooperation with Coppins, signaled the end of two kinds of Trump resistance, neither of which proved successful.

For eight years, a small wing of the party warned that the 45th president was amoral, that he abused power, and that he had thrown out their generational project of trimming entitlements in service of an incoherent populist agenda. Another, larger group stayed their criticism and tried to influence Trump as public allies, but waited patiently for Republican voters to someday rise up and demand an off-ramp to more traditional conservative politics.

It never happened. The political approach the anti-Trump GOP used — traditional media access, warnings of fiscal doomsday, safety at home through foreign military intervention — was outdated, even before Pence announced his candidacy in June.

“I don’t think that Mike Pence’s particular brand of Reagan-type conservatism is as popular as it was,” said Steve Scheffler, an RNC committeeman from Iowa, who had known Pence for years. “I think Pence was exactly right when he said that Medicare and Social Security, if you don’t reform them, will go broke. Unfortunately, a lot of voters don’t want to hear it.”

DAVID’S VIEW

The old GOP’s dream of rejecting Trump has died a few times this year — first when his criminal indictments strengthened him with primary voters, then when he clearly benefited by skipping the party’s debates. Pence’s campaign may have peaked with the first debate, in Milwaukee, when he drew praise for his feisty performance and every candidate onstage agreed that he had been right not to overturn the 2020 election.

The long-term impact of that? Pence’s support shrunk, and Trump’s lead over the field expanded.

That was a familiar sequence of events for Romney. His 2016 speech denouncing Trump, before Super Tuesday, did absolutely nothing to slow the candidate down — and bolstered his argument that the GOP establishment, stuffed with losers, was against him. His votes for both Trump impeachments, which he hoped could change minds, just arrayed Republicans against him. By 2021, the Club for Growth was running attack ads against Republicans who’d praised Romney when he was their party’s nominee; by last year, conservatives in Utah primaries were accusing rivals of being “Mitt Romney Republicans,” threatening the GOP from within.

All this was possible because Romney lost — and, for Pence, because he was the only member of the Trump-Pence ticket who conceded that Joe Biden won.

In “Romney,” Coppins recalls how strange and exciting it was to see “the machinery of partisanship” click in once he became the 2012 nominee; he was “reciting the exact same lines he’d recited hundreds of times before, only now people were going crazy.” His favorable numbers hit catastrophic lows in Gallup polling during the divisive GOP primary, but rebounded quickly afterwards, as Republicans rallied to his side.

That’s what happened with Trump, as the new voters he brought into politics mingled with the diehard Republicans who wanted to beat the Democrats — only by winning, he solidified the trend. Pence tried to work inside the new movement; Romney worked outside of it, even studying where he could back a third party in 2016. (He ended up writing in his wife, Ann, for president.)

What got lost? One big-if-unexciting answer is entitlement reform. Among the least-quoted warnings in Romney’s March 2016 Trump speech: “His tax plan in combination with his refusal to reform entitlements and honestly address spending would balloon the deficit and the national debt.”

That was what happened; Reagan-style deficit spending disconnected from Reagan’s willingness to raise taxes or cut entitlements. And there has been zero interest in revisiting the Romney-Ryan agenda since then; Pence launched his campaign with specific plans to curtail Medicare and Social Security spending, and got nowhere, as Trump was attacking Ron DeSantis for the very same ideas.

The party’s foreign policy also moved further and further away from its pre-Trump position. Both Romney and Pence have spent the last year pushing the party to stand with Ukraine, a no-brainer for two politicians whose politics were shaped by once-standard Cold War conservatism that emphasized big defense spending and strong alliances to head off aggression from Russia. Trump’s skepticism of NATO and Russia-curious instincts, now backed by an influential conservative media ecosystem, have continued to remake the party in the years since he left office.

“Will Republicans continue to be the party of the traditional conservative, that has defined our movement over the last 50 years?” Pence asked in his speech suspending his campaign. “Or will our party follow the siren song of populism unmoored to conservative principles?”

THE VIEW FROM SOCIAL CONSERVATIVES

Seven years ago, the presence of Pence on the ticket reassured conservative voters; some who had serious moral qualms about Trump could tell themselves that they were really voting for Pence. Ralph Reed, the president of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, called Pence’s fate “sad,” but probably inevitable.

“I think he was part of Team Trump, so running against Trump was just more than the system could bear,” Reed said.

Pence’s presence in 2016 was considered especially important because of Trump’s weak track record on abortion, the one issue that was considered make-or-break to the base, even for Trump. In the end, Trump’s justices overturned Roe v. Wade, but Pence’s campaign sputtered with a resolutely anti-abortion message while Trump easily kept the base. He decried 6-week bans in states like Iowa, vaguely promised “something” that would bring “peace” on the issue, and blamed social conservatives for blowing the midterms – and paid no penalty. In a direct faceoff between Trump and top anti-abortion groups, there was no longer any doubt who held sway over the grassroots moving forward.

Coppins, who also profiled Pence in 2018, summed up his fate memorably earlier this year: “In creating a permission structure for voters to excuse Trump’s defective character and flouting of religious values, Pence was unwittingly making himself irrelevant,” he wrote. “In effect, he spent four years convincing conservative Christian voters that the very thing he had to offer them didn’t matter.”

NOTABLE

  • In Politico, one week before Pence ended his campaign, Adam Wren captures how it had become “simply an effort to woo the party married to Trump back to Reaganism.”
  • In The Federalist, Mark Hemingway isn’t impressed by Romney’s self-mythologizing, about a career that “petered out in a hail of grievances.”
  • In Time, Matthew Continetti argues that the election of House Speaker Mike Johnson signaled the end of the Reagan GOP (and Romney GOP): The new one is “down-market, confrontational, politically incorrect, suspicious of institutional authority, and uninterested in following rules set by liberals.”
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States of Play

Alabama. Two Republican members of Congress will face off in a new, deep red district, after judges re-drew the state’s map and turned Rep. Barry Moore’s seat into a Democratic stronghold. Moore will face Rep. Jerry Carl in the 1st District, stretching from the Florida border to the Gulf coast, who is running to Carl’s right with a “track record of being a conservative, being a member of the House Freedom Caucus.”

Colorado. A one-week trial over Donald Trump’s presidential eligibility started in Denver on Monday, with lawyers for the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington arguing that his work to overturn the 2020 election amounted to “insurrection.”

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Joe Rockey/YouTube

Friends of Joe Rockey, “Uneasy.” On Nov. 7, voters in Allegheny County will elect a new county executive. No Republican has won that office in this century. Rockey’s trying to break the streak by attacking Democratic state Rep. Sara Innamorato’s old left-wing statements and associations, including Democratic Socialists of America. “She even wants to put a polling place in the county jail,” a narrator says with a shudder.

Make America Great Again Inc., “Power Play.” Donald Trump’s super PAC took its aim off of Ron DeSantis two months ago, running ads against Joe Biden as a message that the primary was over. But it started running a new anti-DeSantis spot this weekend, attacking his support for Puerto Rican statehood — a position that cuts across partisan lines, and was endorsed in the 2016 GOP platform. Here, it’s described as a left-wing power play that would let the bad guys “ban guns” and “pack the courts.”

Dean 24, “I’m Dean Phillips, and I’m Running for President.” Joe Biden’s latest primary challenger introduced himself to New Hampshire with a weekend bus tour and a 60-second spot about coming to the state for camp when he was a kid. “It’s where I learned to love my country,” says Phillips, promising to “repair America” but avoiding specific policy promises or a mention of what party he belongs to. (Unaffiliated voters can be decisive in New Hampshire primaries.)

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Polls

Iowa’s benchmark poll finds a frozen race at the top and a hot contest for second place — which does matter, if any Republican can exit the state with enough momentum to look like a credible Trump challenger. Trump, DeSantis, Haley, and Scott are all viewed favorably by a supermajority of GOP voters, with net-positive ratings of 30 points or more. No one else comes close; Vivek Ramaswamy’s own negative rating has surged by 17 points since summer, as the race’s old debates about “wokeness” have faded, replaced by a conversation about support for Israel.

We’ve seen a pattern in South Carolina polling since the first debates — Haley consolidating the anti-Trump vote, but Trump with a clear majority and with room to grow. Half of Republicans who aren’t currently supporting Haley say they could, but one-quarter of Republicans not supporting Trump say the same, suggesting that he’d also gain votes if DeSantis or Scott dropped out. And two-thirds of Republican voters don’t think the Trump indictments will amount to anything.

In a two-way race, those attitudes would translate to an easy Trump win — she ties him with college-educated voters, but loses the rest of the primary electorate by a landslide. (In 2016, half of primary voters had college degrees, and Trump only won 27% of them.) Tim Scott is well-liked by his home state Republicans — 66% say they could consider him — and Vivek Ramaswamy has become toxically unpopular, with 60% of South Carolina Republicans ruling him out. No other candidate in the race has been as skeptical about offering complete support for Israel, a killer with evangelical voters.

Republicans swept Arkansas last year, and Gov. Sanders won by more than any Republican had on their first try — a 28-point popular vote margin, carrying 68 of the state’s 75 counties. In her first year, she’s become the most polarizing governor in 20 years, even though 63% of Arkansans say the state’s heading in “the right direction.” There’s no obvious cause; in the same poll, 47% of Arkansas call themselves “conservative,” yet view the state’s two Republican senators more negatively than they had at any point in their careers.

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2024
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

White House. A group of well-connected New Hampshire Democrats launched their “Write In Biden” effort on Monday, led by former state party chair Kathy Sullivan and strategist Jim Demers. “Misguided DNC rules are leaving Joe Biden off the primary ballot here,” the write-in campaign said in its mission statement – politely not mentioning that Biden himself endorsed the plan to put South Carolina’s primary first.

Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips, author Marianne Williamson, and 19 other Democrats did file for the ballot, and Phillips has promised to restore New Hampshire’s primary to the front of the calendar if he wins. “I think we should conserve our environment, our resources, and our traditions like this, especially when they have served the country generally pretty well,” he told reporters on Friday. On Tuesday, Phillips spoke at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, and condemned the Democrats who’d voted against a resolution condemning the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel.

“I want to appear in front of the Muslim community around this country, the Palestinian community, the Jewish community,” Phillips said. “I want to subject myself to them, to hear, to understand.”

House. St. Louis County prosecutor Wesley Bell, the first Black politician to win that office, ended his U.S. Senate bid on Monday and announced a primary challenge to Rep. Cori Bush.

“I’ve heard one refrain from Democrats above all else,” Bell explained at a press conference. “We need you in Washington, but St. Louis needs you in the House of Representatives.”

Bell’s Senate bid was getting little traction, but he ended it with more cash on hand than Bush — $88,000 to her $19,000. “We need steady and effective leadership, and we’re not getting it in the 1st District,” Bell said on Monday. Asked about Bush’s response to the war in Gaza — she has endorsed a ceasefire, and he hasn’t — he characterized her take as “not what Democrats feel is the appropriate response” to a “world that is literally on fire.”

Bush won her seat in 2020, on her second attempt to oust longtime Rep. William Lacy Clay, whose family had held the St. Louis-based seat since 1969, before she was born. Last year she easily defeated Steve Roberts, a state legislator who she refused to debate, citing his response to sexual misconduct accusations. But like Roberts, Bell has portrayed Bush as an ineffective ideologue whose rhetoric damaged the party’s brand: “Defund the police was not only misguided, but it hurt Democrats.”

In a statement, Justice Democrats executive director Alexandra Rojas highlighted Bush’s work so far, including “sleeping on the steps of the Capitol to successfully extend the eviction moratorium,” to explain why she would prevail. “Justice Democrats will do everything we can to protect Missouri’s first Black congresswoman from AIPAC’s right-wing donors — the same donors who fund Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, and the insurrectionists who voted to overturn Joe Biden’s election,” said Rojas.

In Oregon, Portland Rep. Earl Blumenauer announced his retirement on Monday, freeing up a safe Democratic seat that backed Joe Biden by 47 points in 2020.

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Next
  • seven days until elections in Kentucky, New Jersey, Mississippi, Ohio, and Virginia
  • eight days until the third Republican presidential primary debate
  • 76 days until the Iowa caucuses
  • 116 days until the South Carolina Republican primary
  • 372 days until the 2024 presidential election
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