Republicans sharpen attacks as Trumpâs legal jeopardy grows
WASHINGTON â The race for the Republican presidential nomination hit an inflection point this week, with the final major hopefuls announcing their decisions and stepping up attacks on the newly indicted front-runner, former President Trump.
The pack chasing Trump has roughly six months of debates, town halls and fundraising pitches ahead before voters start to winnow the field. That process will be made more urgent by memories of 2016, when multiple rivals split the anti-Trump vote, allowing him to win long before he had consolidated majority support.
Trump has kept a big lead in polls, and âa lot of folks have been quick to declare this race as essentially over,â said University of Denver political scientist Seth Masket. The candidates, however, are showing by their behavior that âthey see an opening,â he said.
Why do so many candidates see Trump as vulnerable? His indictment on Thursday on multiple charges related to his handling of classified documents he had stashed at his Mar-a-Lago residence provides one answer.
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Trump has used previous legal woes as a way to cement the loyalties of Republican voters, and he followed that pattern this week.
âHOW CAN DOJ CHARGE ME WHO DID NOTHING WRONG, WHEN NO OTHER PRESIDENTâS WERE CHARGED, WHEN JOE BIDEN WONâT BE CHARGED FOR ANYTHING,â he wrote in a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, after his lawyers met with prosecutors early in the week. âTHE GREATEST WITCH HUNT OF ALL TIME!â
Intensifying the attacks
In the short run, that may work. At least for a while, the news of the charges will blot out any attention that Trumpâs challengers might receive. Longer-term, no one knows whether a significant number of Republican voters will view the charges as disqualifying or whether they will brush them aside as they have with previous accusations.
Even before the indictment, one candidate, former Gov. Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, had called for Trump to quit the race. Trump âis the target of an ongoing criminal investigation and he should step aside,â Hutchinson wrote on Twitter.
Hutchinsonâs support is barely a blip, however.
In California, which will send the largest delegation to next yearâs Republican nominating convention, three-quarters of likely Republican primary voters had a favorable view of Trump, according to our most recent Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll, co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times, which was taken in late May. The poll found 86% believed the investigations of the former president were more about politics and political revenge than about justice and the law. Seventy-one percent said it was more important to nominate the candidate who best represents their opinions than one with the best chance of beating President Biden.
And a recent Monmouth University poll found that almost two-thirds of Republicans said Trump was definitely (45%) or probably (18%) the partyâs strongest candidate against Biden.
âIf your message to voters who support Trump is he cannot win, you are going to hit a brick wall,â wrote Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.
Finding a message that works against Trump has eluded his Republican opponents since 2015, Masket noted. âNothing has worked.â
But after months in which the candidates mostly appeared to tiptoe around Trump, the attacks have sharpened, most notably with two new entrants â former Vice President Mike Pence and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
The two share the experience of being nearly killed by Trumpâs recklessness â Pence on Jan. 6, 2021, by the Trump-inspired mob that howled for his hanging; Christie by COVID-19, which he contracted in 2020 after extensive prep sessions for the first debate between Trump and Biden. Trump, already ill, hid his symptoms during debate prep; Christie spent seven days in intensive care before recovering.
For Pence â the first vice president to challenge the president he served since John Nance Garner sought to deny Franklin D. Roosevelt a third term in 1940 â Wednesdayâs announcement rally in Iowa marked a shift in course.
âIt might be fair to ask why Iâm challenging my former running mate,â he told the crowd. On Jan. 6, âPresident Trump ... demanded that I choose between him and the Constitution. Now voters will be faced with the same choice,â he said. âAnyone who puts themselves over the Constitution should never be president of the United States. And anyone who asks someone else to put them over the Constitution should never be president of the United States again.â
Whether Pence truly means âneverâ is unclear â he later suggested he might support Trump if he became the nominee. Christie, by contrast, is more comfortable with the concept of campaigning as payback and has built almost his entire pitch around the premise that if he gets on the debate stage with Trump â no sure thing given the qualifying rules â he can deliver a knockout blow.
Trump is a âlonely, self-consumed, self-serving mirror hogâ who ânever admits a fault, and who always finds someone else and something else to blame for whatever goes wrong, but finds every reason to take credit for anything that goes right,â he said at his announcement in New Hampshire. He accused Trump and his family of âgriftâ and described Trumpâs term in office as a failure.
Christie is widely unpopular with voters in both parties, and they may scoff at his shift from Trump apologist to scourge. But even if his campaign goes nowhere, his words could open the way for others.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, for example, who has consistently taken second place in polls, has tried to woo Trumpâs hardcore supporters by running to his right on issues like COVID (heâs criticized Trump for not firing Anthony Fauci) and crime (heâs said he would repeal the criminal justice reform law that Trump signed in 2018, calling it âa jailbreak bill [that] ... has allowed dangerous people out of prisonâ).
But heâs avoided direct attacks while seeding questions about whether the former president can win.
âThereâs a lot of voters who just arenât going to vote for him, who donât like Biden, and who realize that countryâs going in the wrong direction, but theyâre not going to go there,â he said during a recent interview with Foxâs Brian Kilmeade.
Those candidates and the others, including former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, who also entered the race this week, have a short time to see whether their arguments can make a dent, says New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu. He announced that he would not run and said he would try to use his position as governor of the state with the GOPâs first primary to ensure the party does not repeat the experience of 2016.
Trump is an âindisputableâ loser in a rematch with Biden, Sununu wrote. The rest of the field needs to recognize the need to not divide the opposition as they did then.
âEvery candidate needs to understand the responsibility of getting out and getting out quickly if itâs not working,â he said on CNN. âChristmas at the latest.â
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A rare, and big, Democratic win at Supreme Court
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The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the reach of the Voting Rights Act, ruling that Alabamaâs Republican lawmakers are required to draw a new election district that would likely elect a Black Democrat to Congress. By a 5-4 vote, the court rejected an appeal from Alabamaâs Republican lawmakers and said they need to draw a second district to achieve greater equality and to give Black or Latino voters a better chance to elect a candidate of their choice. The ruling by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in Allen vs. Milligan is a surprising win for civil rights lawyers, David Savage reported.
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