The dictionary defines “grift” as “a petty or small-scale swindle.” What is happening to the Republican Party trumps that and jeopardizes the Republican takeover of Congress. Not enough people are willing to discuss it and there are only seven weeks until the midterm elections. Early voting is just about to begin. Time is of the essence.
The financial disclosure numbers are out. Combined, the Democratic National Committee and Republican National Committee have $80 million. Again, that is the combined amount of both parties. Donald Trump’s Save America PAC has $99 million in cash, more than both major political parties.
Unfortunately for President Trump’s endorsed candidates like Blake Masters in Arizona, Herschel Walker in Georgia, Adam Laxalt in Nevada, and Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania, the former President has chosen to pay his legal and travel bills, not fund his preferred candidates. According to the financial disclosure report, Save America PAC spent around $150,000 to beat Liz Cheney in her primary, $3.8 million on legal fees, and $800,000 on travel and events.
Republicans in the Senate, scrambling to take back that house of Congress, have had to make cuts in underperforming races. Masters is one of those candidates from whom the GOP is moving on. Publicly, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says other conservatives are stepping up so McConnell can focus on other races. Privately, Masters has not been a great candidate and Donald Trump has not stepped up to help. McConnell wants to win the Senate, not save Trump’s candidates from themselves. Masters can still win, but he needs Trump and others to help.
Ironically, McConnell pouring his millions in to help Laxalt, Walker, Oz, and JD Vance in Ohio while Trump sits on the sidelines makes McConnell more powerful. A number of the candidates who once questioned whether they would support McConnell for Senate Majority Leader are now in his debt. He has done more for them than Trump, who sits on his pile of cash like Smaug on his gold.
When the FBI searched Mar a Lago, Republicans saw their polling in the generic ballot collapse. They went from leading to trailing Democrats. Even if the polling is wrong, most pollsters agree poll trends are pretty reflective of reality. If so, the more Trump is the center of attraction, the worse the GOP performs.
In Georgia and Nevada, two states Trump lost, Republicans are ahead of their Democrat rivals. Considering national polls tend to have a bias for Democrats, that Joe Lombardo is ahead in Nevada for Governor and Adam Laxalt is ahead for Senate; Kerri Lake is ahead for Governor in Arizona; and Brian Kemp is ahead for Governor in Georgia with Herschel Walker tied, one must wonder how they can do so well in states Democrats managed to steal in 2020. Trump supporters will say, “Just wait,” but of course, if they do win in just seven weeks then it is either further evidence was not stolen or only Donald Trump is capable of having an election stolen from him. Does Trump prefer they lose so he can maintain his fiction and fundraising off stolen election grievances?
It is time to move forward and move on. The constant media obsession about Trump is designed to throw the GOP off its game. During August, it worked. But the party regrouped and is set to win the House and likely pick up the Senate. They’ll do so with Trump hoarding his $99 million, undoubtedly still willing to take credit for victories Mitch McConnell funds.
Republicans have been in a transactional relationship with a man who gave them a lot of good public policy and judges. But that transaction has come at a cost — mostly distraction and self-absorption. As we move past 2022 and head into 2024, the party really must ask itself if it wants a second round with a man who, if he wins, could only serve four years. Literally, any other eligible Republican has the potential for eight years.
Some Republicans now argue a Trump ticket with Ron DeSantis makes sense. Except Trump moved his residency to Florida. The United States Constitution penalizes presidential tickets where both the presidential and vice presidential nominees are from the same state. That state’s electoral college votes do not count. That would start the GOP with a 30 vote deficit in the Electoral College.
Donald Trump did a lot of good for the GOP. He saved the country from Hillary Clinton. He eliminated Iran’s terror master. He ensured the nation could move beyond the shadow of Roe v. Wade. He stopped a humanitarian crisis at the border Biden has recreated. Now, as the GOP fights to win, he sits on $99 million better deployed saving America from Pelosi, Schumer, and Biden. If Trump doesn’t use that money to help his own endorsed candidates, it might be time for Republican donors and voters to redirect their attention elsewhere.
I am not a Trump fan (altho I did vote for him twice) and it DISGUSTS me that he's sitting on all that cash and/or using it for his own personal benefit, specifically his exorbitant legal fees. He put up (some) questionable candidates in states we really need to win and now won't put up money to help elect them? You can bet he'll absolutely take the credit if they win. He governed much more conservatively than I thought he would and I appreciate his judicial picks, his economic policies that saw my 401 value soar and his foreign "policy" that kept our enemies quiet. That being said, I truly hope he doesn't run in 2024, I also know that his ego won't allow it. Our country desperately needs younger blood throughout the Executive and Legislative branches.
I agree that Trump, while President, did many good things for our country. But, I also agree that it is time to move past Trump. He presently is not being helpful to conservative candidates in GA or in the US at large. He has become a great distraction that the Dems are only too happy to use in their quest for electoral victories around the country.