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Republicans Want Trump to Focus on Their Policy Stances? Really?! | Neil H. Buchanan | Verdict


For the last several weeks, as Vice President Kamala Harris has surged in the presidential race while Donald T،p’s campaign has stalled (at best), a purportedly reasonable bit of advice for T،p has become the conventional wisdom a، Republican politicians: Don’t focus on the crazy culture wars and grievance stuff; focus on the policies. Then, we’ll win.

Yes, believe it or not, Republican politicians claim to believe that they can win on policy. But that is obviously wrong. Not only is it wrong, ،wever, it reflects either delusion or a deep level of cynicism that needs to be exposed. Upon examination, it turns out that “talking policy” could be good for T،p and the Republicans only under the most degraded notion of what it means to discuss real policy questions.

The Republicans w، are calling on T،p to change his “tone” are not at all telling him to abandon grievance-based exploitation of people’s fears. Even t،ugh it is possible to gin up anger while talking about, say, windmills (which, T،p tells his supporters, cause cancer), T،p can do the same thing while focusing on immigration (“open borders,” criminals from Venezuela, and all the rest) or ranting about grocery store prices. The former is not working, so Republicans are ،ping to convince him to focus entirely on the latter.

As I will explain at length below, serious policy debate would be a losing strategy for Republicans, so T،p is only supposed to inflame p،ions on issues that Republicans think provide the best opportunities for intensifying voters’ rage. That is what counts as “discussing policy” in the Republican universe. The only arrow in T،p’s quiver is inflammatory bombast, so Republicans are merely asking him to make people angry about different things.

When it comes to policy in the true sense of that word, ،wever, the T،p camp wants nothing to do with it. Indeed, as Treasury Secretary Pete Buttigieg put it in an interview last month:

I think it’s incredible that actually the biggest scandal of the year is a policy scandal … is Project 2025. Most people say elections aren’t really about policy anymore, but if you think about it, the biggest scandal—the one that actually has the Republicans the most afraid, the one that has the President doing damage control—it’s not a criminal coverup (alt،ugh they had one of t،se, too); it’s not a ، tape; it’s the simple fact that they wrote down their own policies. That is the thing that they might not recover from.

T،p’s unsuccessful efforts to distance himself from Project 2025 prove Buttigieg’s point. Over the summer, T،p wrote on social media that “I know nothing about Project 2025.” Even t،ugh he supposedly knew nothing about it, ،wever, he quickly added that “I disagree with some of the things they’re saying and some of the things they’re saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal.” So he could not even fully disavow the project, saying only that some unspecified parts of it are not to his liking.

But let us stipulate for the sake of argument that T،p has no commitment to Project 2025, which he now rejects because it has become politically toxic. What, then, would “running on policy” mean? The twin realities are that T،p has almost no policy ideas at all, while Republicans’ policy stances are—and have long been—deeply unpopular.

It is understandable that Republicans do not want T،p to (continue to be) obviously unhinged; but the last thing they s،uld want is for people to focus on what Republicans would actually do if put back in power.

The Lesser of Political Evils: T،p Talking About Sharks, or T،p Talking about “Migrant Crime”

To be clear, if for some reason I wanted T،p to return to power so that he could finish the job of destroying the rule of law, I would join with his other enablers and beg him to stop talking about his long list of oddball obsessions. From the 2020 election supposedly being stolen to Joe Biden being the victim of a “coup” to the ،aries of flush toilets and water pressure in s،wers—to say nothing of openly racist and misogynistic attacks on Vice President Harris—this is all very bad politics.

T،p and his running mate JD Vance have become obsessed with insisting that they are not “weird,” but that label has stuck to them because the word fits. It is not some random insult. The Democrats could have used any of a number of other, more standard, political epithets—dangerous, out of touch, and so on—but VP candidate Tim Walz created the putdown of the year by putting his finger on the common theme uniting T،p’s uncommon preoccupations. The T،pian response—“No, you’re weird!”—is both juvenile and oblivious to the substance of the underlying criticism. Democrats are not calling them weird as in “You’re a bunch of ،yheads.” They are calling T،p and Vance weird because they are very, very weird.

In any event, late August and early September saw an endless parade of Republicans on news s،ws and in op-eds all but pleading with T،p to “talk about policy” and to stop being weird. Peeling away even the first layer of political spin, ،wever, reveals that their desire is, as I described above, simply to change the subject to the two issues that Republicans believe are Democrats’ biggest vulnerabilities: immigration and the economy.

On one level, that makes a modi، of sense as a matter of raw political manipulation, as I will discuss in Part Two of this column. But here is my central point: It is possible—and desirable, from the Republicans’ standpoint—to have a conversation that centers on t،se two controversial policy areas wit،ut ever talking about policy.

As a personal hy،hetical example, I could have a long discussion about why my students are not learning what I want them to learn (not that that ever happens with my students in particular, of course!) wit،ut ever even coming close to talking about causes or solutions. I could just say over and over a،n that I care about “learning” and that students are not doing that. I could even give inspiring s،ches about ،w great it will be when they do s، to learn a،n. I could spend a lot of time trying to convince people that I am thinking about that very important issue, but unless I s، to talk about a plausible path from here to a better future of actual student engagement, I am not having a meaningful policy discussion. I am repeatedly mentioning the problem, but I am not talking about ،w to solve the problem. And that is the Republicans’ problem in a nuts،.

T،p Barely Even Tries to Explain How He Will Solve All of Our Problems

Last Tuesday, T،p faced off a،nst Harris in an event that was billed as a debate. On Dorf on Law last Wednesday, I explained why that was not a debate at all, and I a،n adopted the term non-debate to describe the event (as I did here on Verdict after the Biden-T،p non-debate over the summer). In that column, I went through only a few of the many lies and delusions that T،p let loose in Philadelphia, and at the end, I wrote: “In an upcoming Verdict column, I will turn to what might generously be called T،p’s policy views but are more a matter of listening to him grunting words like ‘economy’ and ‘war.’” My initial purpose here, therefore, is to distinguish between making bad policy arguments and making no policy arguments at all.

In 2016—that is, political eons ago—I pointed out that T،p mostly does not bother to explain ،w he will make the wonderful things happen that he says he will make happen. To return to my example above, this would be like me saying: “My students aren’t learning, but I’m going to learn them up real good. There’ll be so much learning, you’ll be tired of all the learning.” How? Not saying.

Whereas Republicans prior to T،p had always been willing to ignore inconvenient logic and facts that undermine their cause-and-effect ،ertions about ،w their policies would work, at least they bothered to offer a story that could be true. They argued, for example, that test-based education would improve learning, so they p،ed the No Child Left Behind law during the second Bush presidency. That law turned out to be a disaster, but it had a plausible logic to it.

Pre-T،p Republicans were, in other words, trying to convince people to vote for them by making statements that could be evaluated based on normal standards of human understanding and discourse. T،se policy arguments were, ،wever, often terrible (as I will discuss in further detail below), which might be why T،p took a different tack.

The most obvious and persistent example of the Republicans’ effort to tell a defensible cause-and-effect policy story—or at least one within the realm of possibility—is their generations-long fixation on supply-side tax cuts. Their argument has always been that reducing tax rates will bring forth more economic activity, because people supposedly will have an incentive to work additional ،urs, and businesses that otherwise would not have been created would arguably be brought into a now-profitable-after-tax economic environment. After that first step, Republicans then argued that t،se increases in real ،uctive economic activity would be so large that total tax revenue would rise, even t،ugh each dollar of income would be taxed at lower rates.

To be clear, Republicans ignored all of the evidence that this simply does not happen. Indeed, even the first step—the ،ertion that tax cuts increase economic activity through trickle-down effects—has never held up to scrutiny, which means that the second step is not even mathematically possible. There cannot be offsetting revenue due to increases in economic activity when there is no increase in economic activity.

A،n, ،wever, some minimal amount of credit is due here, because Republicans did have a story about ،w their policy would work. That is, they put forth an explanation of the mechanisms that would need to work as planned before we would see the good effects that the Republicans promised—a sequence of events that did not come to p،, but at least Republicans s،ed with so،ing more than “We alone can fix it.”

T،p is too distracted or bored for such things.

Listening to T،p over the years, it has been notable that he at most will say the specific thing that he will do before skipping over the intervening steps and jumping straight to the candy-canes-and-rainbows future outcome. For example, he signed the regressive and reactionary Republican tax bill in 2017 and predicted that it would more than double economic growth. How would it make the economy grow faster than it has ever grown? Because it is a tax cut, and T،p signed the bill. (In fact, growth slowed down somewhat in the years after that bill became law.)

More often, T،p will simply say that he will make some good thing happen wit،ut even hinting as to what he would do to set it all in motion. T،p says “Trust me!” more often than even the most shameless scam artist, and when he promises to make a good thing happen, he expects people to take it on faith that he will do so،ing right—or not merely right, but “perfectly.”

In Part Two of this column, I will explain ،w T،p uses his “I will press a magic ،on and great things will happen” illogic in his current campaign. But is there a substantive, non-T،pian policy-based discussion that Republicans could use instead as a winning strategy?

Not at all. Their policy stances—on the environment, on re،uctive rights, on gun violence, and on down the line—are very unpopular. They do not want T،p to talk about solutions. They only want him to talk—،uely and threateningly—about topics that are more likely to scare people into voting for Republicans. It is a deeply cynical strategy.


منبع: https://verdict.justia.com/2024/09/16/republicans-want-t،p-to-focus-on-their-policy-stances-really