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Signs of GOP Trump Fatigue?

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Morning Shots

Signs of GOP Trump Fatigue?

Three intriguing data points

Charlie Sykes
Jul 19, 2022
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Signs of GOP Trump Fatigue?

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(Photo by STEPHEN ZENNER/AFP via Getty Images)

Euphemism update: The weekend’s news cycle was dominated by the Texas House report that blamed what it called “systemic failure” in the response to the Uvalde school shooting. And it wasn’t wrong.

The report documented a cascade of blunders, misjudgments, and catastrophic dereliction of duty. “Nearly 400 local, state and federal law enforcement officers were at the scene that day, including 91 state troopers — none of whom moved to lead the response/…” Warnings went ignored, school doors were unlocked, communications failed, and heavily armed cops waited for more than an hour in the hallway while children and teachers died.

But systems don’t fail by themselves; they are made up of people — individuals who make decisions and who act or fail to act. So the term “systemic failure” feels like a euphemism here; an anodyne and bland way of describing a fiasco of cowardice, incompetence, stupidity, and buck-passing by specific individuals. Unless they are held accountable — we can by start by firing them — it seems pointless to even discuss “systemic” reforms.

BTW: The contrast between the Uvalde police response and this guy could hardly be more dramatic: “Bystander Killed Gunman 2 Minutes Into Indiana Mall Shooting.”

Exit take: Uvalde’s police FUBAR is a reminder of the difference between gun cosplay and actual heroism.

Uvalde SWAT Team Bragged About Training at Schools on Facebook

Trump Fatigue?

You’ll notice the question mark because Morning Shots knows that one swallow does not a summer make. But let’s look at three intriguing data points.

The first comes from our colleague Sarah Longwell:

Twitter avatar for @SarahLongwell25
Sarah Longwell @SarahLongwell25
Just had another focus group of Trump voters where ZERO wanted Trump to run again in 2024. Really a striking departure from dozens and dozens of focus groups pre-Jan 6 hearings when at least half of any Trump-voting group wanted him to run again. His support is noticeably softer.
10:17 PM ∙ Jul 18, 2022
8,946Likes1,318Retweets

She explains: “Again, I don’t think it’s that these voters are being persuaded by the hearings exactly. They think they’re a witch hunt, etc. But it’s a reminder to them of how much baggage Trump has. They want someone who can win in 2024 and are increasingly unsure he can.”

**

Meanwhile, in Florida…

Via Allahpundit:

For the second time in five days, a pollster from Florida with whom I’m unfamiliar sees DeSantis leading the former guy comfortably in their mutual home state. Last week Blueprint Polling had the race 51/39 there. Today Victory Insights has it 61/39 if “leaners” are included and 51/33 if they aren’t.

Trump getting blown out in a primary in a state he carried twice, where he easily defeated native son Marco Rubio in 2016, feels … newsy.

Some caveats: The polls may be outliers and we’re talking about DeSantis’s home state. But, Allahpundit speculates that this sort of thing might weigh on Trump’s ego.

Increasingly I wonder if polls like this one might influence Trump’s decision to run. The clearer it becomes from polling that DeSantis stands a real chance of winning, the more Republican fence sitters who might otherwise name Trump as their top choice on sheer “loyalty” grounds might feel comfortable switching. And the more plausible it is that Trump will lose to his apprentice, the less likely it is that he’ll get into the race to begin with. Why not retire as two-time undisputed champion of the party than risk being ignominiously knocked out by a leaner, hungrier fighter?

**

And in Arizona:

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey has already helped block one of former President Donald Trump’s allies from winning the Republican nomination for governor in a crucial battleground state. Now he’s hoping for a repeat in his own backyard.

Ducey is part of a burgeoning effort among establishment Republicans to lift up little-known housing developer Karrin Taylor Robson against former television news anchor Kari Lake, who is backed by Trump. Other prominent Republicans, including former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, have also lined up behind Robson in recent days.

On Monday, Robson’s campaign announced the endorsement of former Vice President Mike Pence, who will campaign with her on Friday — the same day Trump is scheduled to hold a rally for Lake, creating a split-screen moment underscoring the divide between the GOP establishment and Trump.

Aaron Blake writes in the Wapo: “Pence turns Arizona into biggest test of a post-Trump GOP yet.”

[Pence;s] endorsement instantly turns the race into the preeminent battle between Trump’s vision for the GOP and the nascent, establishment-oriented effort to turn the page on 2020 — and potentially on Trump.

Everyone would do well to circle their calendars for Aug. 2.

As Blake notes, “other, more competitive races have pitted certain establishment figures against Trump, almost none have featured this level of high-profile resistance.”

Trump’s candidate is now opposed by:

  • His own former vice president

  • The head of the Republican Governors Association, Ducey (though Ducey’s endorsement was made in his capacity as governor)

  • Former New Jersey governor and Trump adviser Chris Christie

  • Former House speaker Newt Gingrich

  • State Senate President Karen Fann, and

  • Former Arizona congressman Matt Salmon (who dropped out of the race and backed Taylor Robson)

Exit take: Because the Bulwark is big enough to contain a multitude of diverse opinions, Morning Shots congratulates Ducey for pushing back against the crazification of the Arizona GOP. Jim Swift has a different view.

**

BONUS: Speaking of proxy fights…

In Wisconsin, former Governor Scott Walker is firing shots at Trump’s endorsed candidate for governor, Tim Michels. Walker is backing his former lieutenant governor Rebecca Kleefisch in the August primary.

Twitter avatar for @ScottWalker
Scott Walker @ScottWalker
This week, I got an email from Tim Michel’s campaign saying he is a successful businessman. So why shouldn’t he take responsibility for positions taken by his company that opposed conservative reforms?
12:18 AM ∙ Jul 18, 2022
25Likes8Retweets
Twitter avatar for @ScottWalker
Scott Walker @ScottWalker
Tim Michel’s company joined with the union bosses to fight against our reforms like Right to Work and was part of the group lobbying for a higher gas tax. These are the facts. There is only one conservative fighter in the race for Governor. Her name is Rebecca Kleefisch.
12:18 AM ∙ Jul 18, 2022
43Likes12Retweets

His tweets echo this ad that was released last week:

Exit question: Will Pence endorse in Wisconsin too?

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January 6 Committee: The Gathering Storm

Via Bloomberg: “Jan. 6 Panel Extends Inquiry Because Information Keeps Coming.”

The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol, which had planned to finish its inquiry by September, will instead keep operating beyond that because more information keeps coming in, the panel’s chairman said Monday night.

The chairman, Representative  Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, also said that what had been anticipated to be a final report in September on the committee’s findings will now be a “scaled-back” interim report.

**

Via Politico: “‘Sprint Through The Finish’: Why The Jan. 6 Committee Isn't Nearly Done.”

The Jan. 6 select committee once envisioned a single month packed with hearings. Then a fire hose of evidence came its way — and now its members have no interest in shutting or even slowing the spigot.

As its summer hearings show some signs of chipping at Donald Trump’s electoral appeal, select panel members describe Thursday’s hearing as only the last in a series. Committee members, aides and allies are emboldened by the public reaction to the information they’re unearthing about the former president’s actions and say their full sprint will continue, even past November.

The only hard deadline, they say, is Jan. 3, 2023, when Republicans likely take over the House.

**

Via CNN: “Former Trump National Security Council Official Expected To Testify At Thursday's January 6 Hearing.”

Matthew Pottinger, who served on former President Donald Trump's National Security Council before resigning in the immediate aftermath of January 6, 2021, will testify publicly at Thursday's prime-time hearing held by the House select committee investigating the US Capitol attack, according to multiple sources familiar with the plans.

Pottinger is slated to appear alongside former Trump White House aide Sarah Matthews. CNN previously reported that Matthews, who served as deputy press secretary in the Trump White House until resigning shortly after January 6, 2021, was expected to testify publicly.

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A crisis of credibility

Even by the standards of our era of disillusion, these are brutal numbers:

Americans' confidence in two facets of the news media -- newspapers and television news -- has fallen to all-time low points. Just 16% of U.S. adults now say they have "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in newspapers and 11% in television news. Both readings are down five percentage points since last year.

This seems like a good time for a flashback to a piece I wrote for the Niemann Center back in 2017:

Years before Donald Trump derided the media as “fake news,” Vice President Spiro Agnew famously labelled journalists “nattering nabobs of negativism.” But that was a very different era and the media need to understand that the challenges they now face are broader, deeper, more complicated as they become central players in the election campaign rather than simply observers.

All of this increases the pressure for the media to get it right.

This has always been important, but now that errors are weaponized by partisans to discredit the “fake” media, the pressure to avoid self-inflicted wounds has intensified. Even routine mistakes are seized upon to discredit the entire enterprise of journalism. This is the harsh reality check: No matter how good American journalism is, much of the electorate has been conditioned to reject it as “fake.” The last campaign saw an explosion of hoaxes, fabrications that often seemed to overwhelm legitimate news on social media.

This ought to be have been the canary in the coal mine for conservatives, but in a stunning demonstration of the power and resiliency of our new post-factual political culture, Trump and his allies in the right media quickly absorbed, disarmed, and turned the term “fake news” against its critics, draining it of any meaning. Now any news deemed to be biased, annoying, or negative can be labelled “fake news.”

Trump and his supporters now routinely conflate journalistic errors or lapses with intentional distortions; and many voters seem willing to accept the president’s chronic falsehoods or are indifferent to the deceptions.

The result is a toxic and challenging environment for journalists. They can answer the challenge with reporting that is aggressive, accurate, thorough, and fair. The next few years will be a referendum on whether they succeed.

The early returns are not promising.


Secession Fever: An Update

JVL mentioned this Yahoo/YouGov survey. The dazzling lowlight:

Red-state Donald Trump voters are now more likely to say they’d be personally “better off” (33%) than “worse off” (29%) if their state seceded from the U.S. and “became an independent country” . . .

And an even larger share of red-state Trump voters say their state as a whole would be better off (35%) rather than worse off (30%) if it left the U.S. . . .

And red-state Trump voters divide roughly down the middle on the question of whether things would be better (37%) or worse (40%) if the country as a whole actually split into a Blue Nation and a Red Nation. No other cohort views disunion so favorably.

Exit take. You’ve been warned. Again. This is from January 2021:

Twitter avatar for @SykesCharlie
Charlie Sykes @SykesCharlie
Calling this right now: secession is the next big MAGA play. Don’t think they are that crazy? Then you haven’t been paying attention.
Twitter avatar for @MikeBrestDC
Mike Brest @MikeBrestDC
Wyoming GOP Chair floats secession following @Liz_Cheney's vote to impeach Trump. "Many of these Western states have the ability to be self-reliant, and we’re keeping eyes on Texas too and their consideration of possible secession," he said. @dcexaminer https://t.co/oxpNjOblJA
1:21 AM ∙ Jan 19, 2021
6,863Likes1,486Retweets

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Quick Hits

A clever plan to foil a 2024 coup attempt quietly advances

Greg Sargent in the Wapo:

A serious threat to our democracy is this scenario: A state legislature appoints a slate of presidential electors in defiance of the state’s popular vote, and one chamber of Congress, controlled by the same party, counts those electors. Under current law, those electors would stand, potentially tipping a close election.

But now, these senators appear to be homing in on solutions to that problem. If they succeed, it would constitute a substantial accomplishment, thanks in part to the House Jan. 6 Committee’s focus on President Donald Trump’s attempt to overthrow U.S. democracy.

Cheap Shots

Twitter avatar for @SykesCharlie
Charlie Sykes @SykesCharlie
This is what TDS does to your brain.
Twitter avatar for @Acyn
Acyn @Acyn
Stefanik: You have the entire Biden family profiting off of Joe Biden’s position… That is unacceptable in America and imagine if Republicans ever did that? https://t.co/lgiYrQqFut
8:04 PM ∙ Jul 18, 2022
5Likes1Retweet

**

Twitter avatar for @Timodc
Tim Miller @Timodc
This video also includes Walker explaining he went on a high speed chase with a loaded firearm and intent to kill and voices in his head telling him he needs to do it for vengeance. https://t.co/7vi0XAKC7c
Twitter avatar for @AccountableGOP
The Republican Accountability Project @AccountableGOP
Herschel Walker falsely claims that he is an FBI agent. It gets worse. He proceeds to tell an unhinged story about angrily grabbing a gun with the intent to kill a man. https://t.co/jkttGgYDSG
1:30 AM ∙ Jul 19, 2022
1,994Likes698Retweets
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Signs of GOP Trump Fatigue?

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CHRISTOPHER WOOD
Jul 19, 2022

I'm glad to read that Hershel Walker has voices in his head to guide him through life.

Considering his usual delusional rantings, I figured Hersh just free forms concepts from words flying in and out of his brain.

It is sad that 46% of Republican Georgians really don't care having a totally incompetent Senator.

But then GOP Iowans are willing to give an 88 year old another 6 years in the Senate.

"And you don't believe we're on the Eve of Dysfunction?"🤪

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Paul Mccrary
Jul 19, 2022

Praising Scott Walker? He's anti-education, anti-worker, pro-crony capitalism. He's a bad dude

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