Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, December 21, 2015. Getty Images. |
Elites and media really hate Donald Trump’s voters. By Michael Walsh. New York Post, December 26, 2015.
Walsh:
To hear the patronizing wise men of the Republican Party tell it, anyone who would vote for Donald Trump for president must be deranged. “Trumpkins,” they call them, mental midgets and xenophobic troglodytes who’ve crawled out from their survivalist caves in order to destroy the Beltway Establishment.
To hear the patronizing wise men of the Republican Party tell it, anyone who would vote for Donald Trump for president must be deranged. “Trumpkins,” they call them, mental midgets and xenophobic troglodytes who’ve crawled out from their survivalist caves in order to destroy the Beltway Establishment.
How
their resentful attitude galls the crack cadres of campaign consultants who
brought conservatives halfhearted standard-bearers like John McCain and Mitt
Romney to do sham battle against Barack Obama in 2008 and ’12, then return to
the safety of the US Senate and a beachfront mansion in La Jolla.
The
peasants are revolting!
And all
on behalf of a bloviating billionaire whose conservatism and party loyalty are
suspect.
Now,
after months of whistling past the graveyard of Trump’s seemingly inexorable
rise and assuring themselves that his candidacy will collapse as voters come to
their senses, a CNN poll released Wednesday showing Trump now lapping the field
has the GOP establishment in full meltdown mode. The survey shows Trump with
nearly 40% of the primary vote, trailed by Ted Cruz at 18%, Ben Carson and
Marco Rubio tied at 10%, and the also-rans (including great GOP hope Jeb Bush)
limping along far behind.
Their
panic was best articulated last week in The Daily Beast by GOP consultant Rick
Wilson, who wrote that Trump supporters “put the entire conservative movement
at risk of being hijacked and destroyed by a bellowing billionaire with poor
impulse control and a profoundly superficial understanding of the world . . .
walking, talking comments sections of the fever swamp sites.”
Some
might take that as a backhanded compliment. Can the GOP really be so out of
touch with the legions of out-of-work Americans — many of whom don’t show up in
the “official” unemployment rate because they’ve given up looking for work in
the Obama economy? With the returning military vets frustrated with
lawyer-driven, politically correct rules of engagement that have tied their
hands in a fight against a mortal enemy? With those who, in the wake of the
Paris and San Bernardino massacres by Muslims, reasonably fear an influx of
culturally alien “refugees” and “migrants” from the Middle East?
With
those who fear for their own families’ futures and the future of the country as
founded?
In other
words, has the junior wing of the Permanent Bipartisan Fusion Party, ably
embodied by Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan, forsaken even token opposition to
the “progressive” ethos? Can it be true that everybody’s fondest wish for
Campaign ’16 is the dynastic-restoration battle of Clinton vs. Bush?
Jeb
Bush seems to think so, suggesting recently that he might rethink the pledge he
signed vowing to support the eventual Republican nominee. To which The Donald
characteristically responded: Who cares? “He is a low-energy person, and he
does not represent strength, power and stamina, which are qualities our country
desperately needs.”
Others
have suggested, half in jest, that should Trump win the nomination, the GOP
might have to go third party — against its own nominee.
Even
lame-duck Obama has waded in, cheekily blaming “economic stresses” and
flatlining wages for Trump’s groundswell. “Particularly, blue-collar men have
had a lot of trouble in this new economy, where they are no longer getting the
same bargain that they got when they were going to a factory and able to
support their families on a single paycheck . . .
Somebody like Mr. Trump is taking advantage of that.”
Remember
when Obama apologized for saying that voters who disagreed with him “cling to
guns or religion”? Yeah, guess he wasn’t really sorry.
Objections
to Trump include that he has no clue that politics is, as the saying goes, the
art of the possible. That his reality-show candidacy — as a recent Quinnipiac
poll purportedly found — would be an “embarrassment” to half the country. That
the “short-fingered vulgarian” — as the old Spy magazine famously dubbed him —
is neither a real Republican nor a real conservative.
To
which his supporters, to whom he is an anger-directed guided missile heading
straight for Washington, retort: So what? The irrepressible Trump is already
ignoring his rivals and gleefully taking the fight to the presumptive (if she
doesn’t get indicted) Democrat nominee, noted prevaricator Hillary Clinton.
In the
movie business, there’s something called the “cheer moment,” when the
long-suffering hero finally decks his tormentor with a satisfying right cross.
What the Beltway Republicans fail to understand is that their conservative base
— which gave them stunning congressional victories in 2010 and 2014 and has
nothing to show for it — has been longing for precisely that moment since
Reagan crushed Mondale 49-1 in 1984.
The
Trumpkins are sick of winning and having nothing to show for it, and their
vengeance will be terrible. Maybe the Establishment should stop belittling them
and listen instead.