Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what's next for those who oppose
Trump
Send a link to a friend
[December 13, 2024]
By JILL COLVIN, LISA MASCARO and HANNAH FINGERHUT
WASHINGTON (AP) — She’s an Iraq War combat veteran and sexual assault
survivor who has advocated for years to improve how the military handles
claims of sexual misconduct.
But when Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, appeared initially cool to the
nomination of President-elect Donald Trump ’s choice of Pete Hegseth to
serve as defense secretary — a man who once said women should not serve
in combat and who has himself been accused of sexual assault — she faced
an onslaught of criticism from within her own party, including threats
of a potential primary challenge in 2026.
“The American people spoke,” said Bob Vander Plaats, president and CEO
of the Family Leader and a conservative activist in Ernst’s home state.
“When you sign up for this job, it’s a big boy and big girl job, and
she’s feeling the pressure of people vocalizing their disappointment,
their concern with how she’s handling this.”
The pressure campaign against Ernst, once a rising member of the GOP
leadership, shows there is little room in Trump’s party for those who
can’t get to yes on Hegseth or any of his other picks for his incoming
administration
It underscores the power Trump is expected to wield on Capitol Hill in a
second term and serves as a warning to other lawmakers who may be
harboring their own concerns about other Trump selections, including
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for health secretary and Tulsi Gabbard to be
director of national intelligence.
“If the king wants a different senator from Iowa, we’ll have one. If he
doesn’t, we won’t,” said Iowa talk show host Steve Deace, suggesting on
his show Monday that he would be willing to jump in against Ernst if
Trump wanted a challenger. “I think someone’s got to be made an example
out of, whether it’s Joni or someone else.”
Ernst's allies say she can handle criticism
People close to Ernst, a retired Army National Guard lieutenant colonel,
stress her mettle and say her eventual decision will depend on her
assessment of Hegseth, a former “Fox & Friends Weekend” host and
veteran, and nothing else.
“Has there been Twitter pressure? Sure. But Joni’s a combat veteran.
She’s not easily pressured,” said David Kochel, an Iowa Republican
strategist and longtime Ernst friend and adviser.
Ernst has worked steadily to shore up her relationship with Trump after
declining to endorse him before the Iowa caucuses that kicked off this
year's campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. During a
recent visit to Mar-a-Lago, Trump's Florida club, she met with Trump and
billionaire Elon Musk with ideas for their budget-slashing Department of
Government Efficiency. She heads up a newly formed DOGE caucus in the
Senate.
Trump has not tried personally to pressure Ernst to back Hegseth,
according to a person familiar with their conversations who spoke on
condition of anonymity to disclose them. And he has not targeted her —
or any potential holdouts — publicly in social media posts.
He also hasn't had to.
The response to Ernst built quickly, first in whispers following her
initially cool remarks after meeting with Hegseth, then into a pile-on
from powerful figures in the “Make America Great Again” movement.
Only about 2 in 10 Americans approve of Hegseth’s nomination, according
to Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs polling. About
one-third of Republicans approve of him as a pick, and 16% disapprove.
Another 1 in 10 Republicans, roughly, are neutral and say they neither
approve nor disapprove.
Trump allies had been concerned that a successful effort to derail
Hegseth’s candidacy would empower opposition to other nominees,
undermining his projections of complete dominance of the party. In the
narrowly held Senate, with a 53-47 GOP majority in the new year, any
Trump nominee can only afford a few Republican “no” votes if all
Democrats are opposed.
[to top of second column]
|
Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, talks after a policy luncheon on
Capitol Hill, Sept. 24, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib,
File)
Those piling on included Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and
conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who warned that Ernst’s
political career was “in serious jeopardy" and that primary
challengers stood at the ready.
One social media post from the CEO of The Federalist featured
side-by-side photos comparing Ernst to ousted Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.,
whom Trump recently said deserves to be jailed, along with other
members of the House committee that investigated the Capitol riot.
Building America’s Future, a conservative nonprofit, announced plans
to spend half a million dollars supporting Trump's pick of Hegseth,
the Daily Caller first reported. The group has already spent
thousands on Facebook and Instagram ads featuring Ernst’s photo and
is running a commercial urging viewers to call their senators to
back him.
Criticism mounted at home, too. Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird,
who quickly endeared herself to Trump when she became the
highest-ranking state official to endorse him ahead of this year’s
caucuses, wrote an op-ed for the conservative Breitbart news site
that was seen as a not-so-subtle warning.
“What we’re witnessing in Washington right now is a Deep State
attempt to undermine the will of the people," she wrote.
Local Republican groups also encouraged Iowans to call Ernst’s
office and urged her to back Trump's picks.
While incumbents have particular staying power in Iowa, Trump has a
track record of ending the careers of those who cross him.
Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller defended the tactics.
“Right now, this is President Trump’s party,” he said Tuesday at The
Wall Street Journal's CEO Council Summit in Washington. “I think
voters want to see the president being able to put in his people.”
A warning of what is to come
Ernst has gradually appeared to soften on Hegseth. By Monday, after
meeting with him once again, she issued a statement saying they had
had “encouraging conversations.”
Ernst said Hegseth committed “to completing a full audit of the
Pentagon” and to hire a senior official who will “prioritize and
strengthen my work to prevent sexual assault within the ranks.”
“As I support Pete through this process, I look forward to a fair
hearing based on truth, not anonymous sources,” she said.
But for many Republican senators who have found themselves on the
wrong side of Trump, it was hard not to see the campaign against
Ernst as a warning.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, the Alaska Republican who also met with Hegseth
this week, said the attacks seemed “a little more intense than
usual,” while acknowledging that she is “no stranger” to similar
MAGA-led campaigns. She was reelected in 2022 after beating a
Trump-endorsed challenger.
Murkowski said the potential attacks don’t weigh into her
decision-making, but added, “I’m sure that it factors into Sen.
Ernst’s.”
___ Colvin reported from New York and Fingerhut from Des Moines,
Iowa.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|