Trump and RINOs both trouble GOP
Published 10:20 pm Friday, August 14, 2015
By MICHAEL REAGAN | The Reagan Group
Donald Trump did wonders for Fox News’ ratings and Megyn Kelly’s star power last week.
But “The Donald” didn’t do himself, the Republican Party or the conservative cause any favors.
Millions of viewers saw clear evidence that Trump is not a serious Republican candidate or really a conservative.
He espoused no conservative principles or policies. He offered no ideas or specific conservative solutions to any domestic or foreign problem.
All he proved – as if the whole TV audience didn’t already know – was that he’s an egomaniacal billionaire who’s certain he’d make a good Republican president.
During the debate, he repeated his shallow generalities about building a high wall to stop illegal immigration, making better trade deals with China and the serial incompetence of our leaders in Washington.
And he boasted that “I’m rich. I buy candidates. Government is broken. I can fix it.”
Because he appeals mostly to people who listen to conservative talk radio 24/7, Trump has won over a large number of Republicans and conservatives who mistakenly think he is one of them.
Trump’s poll numbers in Iowa, New Hampshire and elsewhere have gone up since last week. They remain embarrassingly high for the Republican Party, but they’ll start falling to Earth soon.
It’ll happen when his Don Rickles routine wears thin, his liberal tendencies are exposed and the GOP’s bloated preseason roster gets cut down to Jeb, Scott, John, Rand, Ted and probably Carly.
Meanwhile, Trump has issued a threat to the Republican Party.
He said that if it does not treat him “fairly” or with “respect,” whatever that means, he might run next fall as an independent or a third party candidate.
Trump calls his threat “leverage” but I think others would call it “extortion” or “blackmail.”
If he doesn’t get his way, he’d be willing to sabotage the GOP in 2016 and almost certainly give Hillary, Joe Biden or even Bernie the Socialist the keys to the White House.
For some reason, many Republicans and conservatives have become their own worst enemies.
If they don’t agree with 100 percent of everything a primary candidate says or does, they call him or her a “Republican in name only” and they’re against them.
It’s gotten totally nuts and self-defeating.
Conservatives love to drop my father’s name and try to find candidates that act and think like he did. But they forget that Ronald Reagan was an 80-20 guy.
He was happy to agree with 80 percent of a Republican candidate’s views because he knew that he’d never find someone with whom he agreed 100 percent.
He didn’t make the perfect conservative the enemy of the good conservative.
Reagan is founder and chairman of The Reagan Group.