Analysis-Trump is still Trump and that could be a problem for him in
2024
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[November 16, 2022]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As he mounts another
run for president, Donald Trump by all accounts is still the same Donald
Trump - aggrieved, petulant and tunnel-focused on his political
standing. It's the electoral landscape around him that has changed.
And after Republicans' underwhelming performance in the 2022 midterm
elections, people in the party increasingly want to look forward, not
back. Trump is no longer the shoo-in for its presidential nomination
that he might have been even a year ago.
His potential rivals, notably Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, have been
sparking enthusiasm among Republican voters and, just as importantly,
raising money from enthusiastic donors. DeSantis thrashed his Democratic
opponent to win re-election last week, while many high-profile
Trump-backed candidates lost their races.
In an Election Day exit poll published by Edison Research, six out of 10
respondents said they had an unfavorable opinion of the former
president.
Trump faces huge challenges on multiple fronts: civil and criminal
investigations and a stream of damaging revelations in a congressional
inquiry about his efforts to hold onto power despite losing to Joe Biden
in the 2020 presidential vote.
In August, he became the subject of a federal criminal probe into a
trove of top-secret documents he was keeping at his Florida home. Trump
has claimed he was in lawful possession of the papers.
He no longer has access to his main communication platform and weapon -
his Twitter account - which he used to mobilize zealous supporters and
effectively attack perceived enemies. Twitter's new owner, Elon Musk,
however, has suggested he could restore Trump's account.
Trump does retain strong advantages going into a 2024 Republican
primary: He remains the most dominant force in the party, he has legions
of admirers and he has emerged triumphant from previous setbacks. He
also was sitting on a stockpile of about $77 million as of last month,
although election rules would make it difficult for him to access it.
POLARIZING FIGURE
At 76, he is also a deeply polarizing figure who has tried the patience
of much of the American public. Seven years ago, when he launched his
successful presidential bid, Trump the showman and Trump the mogul were
known quantities to voters, but who he was as a politician was an open
question.
Now there is little doubt, and voters have punished his party as a
result, suggesting there is a ceiling to Trump's appeal.
In a series of Republican Party primaries this year, Trump played the
role of kingmaker, largely succeeding in his efforts to boost
like-minded candidates. But the general election was somewhat of a
disaster for him, as Senate candidates he backed in critical states
flopped and cost Republicans control of the chamber.
"It’s basically the third election in a row that Donald Trump has cost
us the race, and it’s like, three strikes, you’re out,” Governor Larry
Hogan of Maryland, a Republican, told CNN on Sunday.
MORE THE MERRIER
Trump is also inextricably linked to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack by his
supporters on the U.S. Capitol to try to stop lawmakers from certifying
Biden's victory. Trump persists in falsely claiming he lost in 2020
because of massive fraud.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump makes
an announcement of his plans to run for president in the 2024 U.S.
presidential election at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach,
Florida, U.S. November 15, 2022. REUTERS/Octavio Jones
Congressional hearings into the attack have reminded voters that he
appeared willing to endanger the safety of his loyal vice president,
Mike Pence, who was there on the day, and to fire top officials at
the Justice Department to further his unconstitutional push to stay
in power.
While Trump wants to seek the Republican nomination unopposed, if
rivals do step up to challenge him, he would want as many candidates
as possible to get into the race. In that fractured field, a strong
alternative candidate would have to emerge for him to lose the
nomination.
An October opinion poll by Morning Consult/Politico showed Trump
capturing more than 50% of the vote among Republicans, with DeSantis
at about 21%. A recent poll of Floridians by Victory Insights found
Trump and DeSantis knotted at 50% each.
In a sign that Trump views DeSantis as a mounting threat, he has in
recent days taken to boasting at rallies that he would crush him in
a Republican primary.
TRUMPISM WITHOUT TRUMP?
There is also the question of whether Trump's rightwing Make America
Great Again movement, which has captured much of the Republican
Party, needs him any more, becoming instead a Trumpist movement
without Trump.
A new wave of candidates has echoed much of Trump's rhetoric without
being saddled with his personal liabilities. At times, they have
taken angrier and more absolutist positions than those of the former
president.
As Florida’s governor, DeSantis has fought against abortion rights,
social media companies and the teaching of race and gender in the
classroom. He has backed new restrictions on voting.
To some Republicans, DeSantis at age 44 looks more like their
party’s future than Trump does. Where DeSantis has placed himself on
the cutting edge of Republican politics, Trump by contrast may seem
to be like a rock band past its prime, content to play its greatest
hits again and again.
Other potential contenders include two rising stars - former South
Carolina Governor and former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley and South
Dakota Governor Kristi Noem. Add to the mix Pence and former
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who may appeal more to
establishment-minded Republicans than Trump does.
Trump’s early announcement may be seen as an attempt to keep these
potential rivals off the electoral battlefield while he remains in a
position of relative strength. He could succeed in getting
Republicans behind his third presidential nomination.
It is just as possible, however, that those rivals will see a
damaged candidate and smell blood in the water, leaving Trump to
decide just how much he wants to do battle for the party he once
unquestionably commanded.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Additional reporting by Jason Lange;
Editing by Ross Colvin and Howard Goller)
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