Trump’s potted plants
by digby
The Senate Republican Caucus |
I’m talking about the elected Republicans who would rather go down with his sinking ship than even save themselves. This article by the AP comes with this headline:
Some Trump allies starting to worry about investigations
Ya think?
Republicans are still coming to terms with their drubbing in last month’s House elections and looking for someone to blame. The departure of John Kelly as White House chief of staff has set off a disorganized search for a replacement who could stay in the job through the 2020 campaign. After Trump’s top choice, the vice president’s chief of staff Nick Ayers, passed on the job, few of the remaining candidates have political experience.
Also, Democrats will soon take control of the House of Representatives, wielding subpoena power and potentially exploring impeachment proceedings. Meanwhile, financial markets have been jittery, in part because of Trump’s trade wars and concerns that higher borrowing costs could ultimately trigger a recession.
Facing pressure from Mueller and an impending onslaught of Democratic investigations, Trump could hew even further to the right, catering exclusively to the base of voters he is concerned about losing, according to a Republican close to the White House who has consulted on the early re-election efforts. That instinct would echo the president’s double-down, scorched-earth response to the crises that hit his 2016 campaign, including the “Access Hollywood” tape about forcing himself on women, and could make it harder to woo the independent voters or disaffected Democrats he may well need.
Could Trump face a primary election challenge from within his own party? He doesn’t seem concerned.
The president is eager to unleash his re-election machinery and begin to collect pledges of loyalty from across the GOP to quell any hint of an insurrection, according to a campaign official and a Republican familiar with the inner workings of the campaign but not authorized to speak publicly.
The Trump team has discussed the possibility of a challenge from someone such as outgoing Ohio Gov. John Kasich or Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake. A week after the midterm elections, Kasich traveled to New Hampshire for a public speech and private meetings with prominent Republicans.
Flake, who has tangled repeatedly with Trump, isn’t making any personal commitment, but his feelings about a challenger are clear.
“Somebody needs to run” against Trump, he said Monday. “I hope somebody does.”
While some Democrats eying the White House are expected to announce campaigns in the first few weeks of 2019, a Republican challenger could move more slowly, according to two GOP operatives who have been involved in hypothetical discussions about taking on Trump. Waiting until early spring, for example, could give Republicans time to assess whether Trump will be weakened by Mueller’s investigation or a downturn in the economy.
One leading House Republican said the situation surrounding Trump remains volatile and has urged colleagues to wait for the Mueller report, which some believe could emerge early next year. That Republican, who demanded anonymity to assess the situation candidly, has urged fellow GOP lawmakers to not defend the indefensible but to also not believe every charge. The lawmaker expressed hope that the special counsel’s findings come out sooner rather than later so there will be more time before the 2020 elections.
For all the private and not-so-private party worries, many close to Trump predict he not only will survive the Russia investigation but will be re-elected in two years. They point to his remarkable ability to shake off scandal, the sway he continues to hold over his base of GOP voters, the fear his Twitter account has instilled among many Republican elected officials and what they believe is the lack of top-shelf talent among Democrats who could face him in 2020.
Echoing the president, they contend the special counsel has come up empty-handed in his efforts to prove Russian collusion and is ready to settle for a campaign finance charge they believe is minor and will be ignored or not understood by most voters.
The president has said the lesson of the 2018 midterms is that Republican candidates abandon him at their own peril. And the Republicans who remain in Congress after that election aren’t likely to back away from him.
He’s innumerate so he can’t look at the results and see that he lost in a landslide that will result in his defeat if it’s replicated. He thinks, as Chuck Schumer indicated this morning, winning Indiana and North Dakota Senate seats means he’s omnipotent.
They are still in denial. And they are now turning over all responsibility for oversight to the House Democrats, hoping that if the worst happens they can quietly slip back into office in 2020 without having to defend their actions.
If you want to know what defending the indefensible really looks like, this abdication of all responsibility for oversight of this criminal miscreant is at the top of the list.
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