That the Donald Trump-speared “Make America Great Again” movement, inspired by a Ku Klux Klan-inspired slogan in the early 20th Century and every bit as dangerous, has been a driving force in his campaign to retake the White House after his 2020 loss isn’t a surprise. Indeed, in certain “swing states,” including my state of Pennsylvania, he and current President Joe Biden are running neck-and-neck.
But two recent situations lead me to believe that “Trump
fever” might be breaking.
The first is his walking back on an anti-abortion stance
that he adopted to get conservative “Christians” to vote for him — specifically,
his vow to have the Supreme Court reverse Roe
v. Wade. That has, however, since backfired as numerous states have
strengthened their own laws permitting abortion, whether by legislation or
voter referendum. Trump has since occasionally called its repeal “a mistake,”
disappointing anti-abortion activists, including former Vice President Mike Pence, who were convinced — with no evidence —
that he was truly on their side.
The other is tying aid to the war effort in Ukraine to more
control of the border with Mexico — or, at least, the ruse of such. You may
recall that congressional Republicans were stalling on military aid to Ukraine,
which had been invaded by Russia two years ago, to get an immigration bill
passed (something that then-President Obama had pleaded for a decade
previously). Well, President Biden eventually was able to broker such a bill
but Trump, running for the presidency again, said that Republicans shouldn’t
vote it because he wanted to bludgeon Democrats with the issue during the
campaign, effectively killing it.
Thing is, aid to Ukraine recently passed. Why? Well, Trump of late has been distracted with the “hush money” trial in New York state court involving his alleged one-night stand with adult-film star Stormy Daniels and thus couldn’t comment on its passing; we all know that Trump, when he was president, tried to pull the United States out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, rumored to be at the behest of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has long sought to destroy that alliance because it crimps his imperialistic tendencies. (Keep in mind that paying off Daniels with $130,000 to keep quiet wasn’t itself illegal; it’s that he tried to charge that money to his campaign, thereby committing business fraud under state law.)
Even more recently, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, one
of Trump’s strongest supporters, introduced a resolution to remove Mike Johnson
as Speaker of the House for working with Democrats, which went nowhere in large
part because Republicans noted — correctly, in my view — that they’re now being
blamed for causing chaos but getting absolutely nothing done, thus giving more
power to the Democrats. One GOP congressman even responded to Greene’s move with
the sarcastic Southern saying “Bless her heart.” And it’s that chaos that Trump
has always brought to the political scene that led Geoff Duncan, a former Georgia
lieutenant governor, to write an endorsement of Biden in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
What I suspect we’re seeing is that Trump, who has always
painted himself and been regarded as an “outsider,” with his response to the
abortion issue turning against him, has been reduced to one of the
mealy-mouthed politicians that he has always denounced in acerbic, insulting
terms. To be honest, I didn’t entirely expect that the takedown of Roe would have this effect on the
abortion-rights-supporting political left. But what we’re seeing now is a man trying
desperately to save his own political skin by going back on his stated position
because it’s now being used against him, which is why the approval of aid to Ukraine is also important
And that threatens MAGA ideology, because it has always
wanted to dominate the political process by bullying its opponents into
silence.
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