He sets the stage.
He makes the demands.
Trump’s in charge, ladies and gentlemen of the Republican
Party. Get in line, get out of way, or you will get gone. You push back on his
agenda, and you are gone.
Congressman Thomas Massie is the latest to learn this lesson
too late. He could talk about “his principles” all day long, but what did he
accomplish?
Nothing.
He went along with Speaker-designate Kevin McCarthy in
January 2023. In exchange for Massie’s support, McCarthy gave him a coveted
spot on the House Rules committee.
In May 2023, McCarthy was pushing through another porkulus
spending debt-ceiling increase. Fiscal conservatives were clamoring for its
failure. It came before the must-pass House Rules Committee, where it squeaked
by to the floor on a 7-6 vote. Thomas Massie, Mr. “National Debt Alarm Clock”
principled libertarian conservative, was the tie-breaking vote.
At that point, I realized that Massie was all talk and no
walk. There were no principles he was willing to fight for, if it meant losing
a seat on a key committee or not being able to grandstand against President
Trump.
The same President Trump had endorsed him in 2020, even
though Massie had made him mad by calling for a voice vote on the COVID-19
pandemic spending. The same President Trump backed him in 2024, as well.
When 2025 rolled in, with Trump at the helm and Republicans
running both chambers of Congress, Massie just threw a fit and stalled the
Speakership vote. Instead of incumbent Speaker Mike Johnson, Massie nominated
Tom Emmer. The Minnesota Congressman had withdrawn his name for consideration two
years ago because he was too liberal, more liberal than Johnson!
And yet, “principled conservative libertarian” whatever
Massie chose the liberal Minnesotan. Make it make sense!
It doesn’t.
Massie was a grandstander, a virtue-signaling grifter
throughout the Second Trump Administration. He voted against immigration
enforcement. He voted against the spending reforms (and cuts!) in the Big
Beautiful Bill.
Then he started bellyaching about Israel and the Epstein
list.
Massie had long cast contrarian votes on bills and
resolutions relating to Israel. There’s nothing wrong with voting the will of
one’s constituents when they clash with Trump.
Massie picked too many fights, though, and he lost. He angered
the general conference by forcing votes. He set off Christian Zionists with his
hostility to Israel. He then outraged Trump and his MAGA base by voting down
the BBB, then blasted the President over the Epstein files and voted against
the party’s main-line agenda.
Massie should have limited himself to two targets, and one
of them should not have been Trump.
As Scott Jennings shared on a recent CNN roundtable, Trump
has transformed himself into the consummate party boss. And not a moment too
soon! The Republican Party has long struggled with unity and organization. An
incumbent President often serves as the leader of the party, but the boss-like
maneuvers that Trump has employed rival all of his previous Republican
presidential colleagues. Bush I and II, Reagan, Ford, Nixon, and onwards into
the past all showed more of a deferential attitude toward the GOP conference,
oftentimes because Republicans not in the majority to begin with. Playing along
was essential in those days.
Trump has changed political dynamics, ensuring Republican
majorities with sustained party discipline.
If you cross Trump, you'd better knock him out, step aside,
or get ready to lose your seat.
By and large, this kind of policy and political discipline
is refreshing. Republican voters have long had to tolerate campaign
conservatives who moved in line with the Potomac two-step once in office.
Voters didn’t realize the importance of holding incumbents accountable until
the Tea Party movement, and even then, it was a hit-and-miss effort.
With Trump, bad incumbents are getting the heave-ho, and
it’s all for the better.
Louisiana’s Bill Cassidy was always a moderate, and he
showed his conciliatory (read, backstabbing) ways when he voted to convict
Trump. That kind of wishy-washy failure has no place in the larger movement.
Sure, some will complain that Trump is turning the GOP into
a Trump-Only cult. The truth is that some Republicans in both chambers have
voted against the President, even criticized him openly, and yet Trump doesn’t
trash them or force them out. Consider Congressman David Valadao (R-CA) and US
Senator Susan Collins (R-ME). Both of these moderate-to-liberal RINOs are
popular in their respective Democrat-majority constituencies. They have to lean
to the left to scoop up enough votes.
Collins and Valadao don’t showcase their resistance to
Trump, though. They just disagree with him, vote against the party on some
bills, but they support the GOP leadership across the board, which enables the
majority of conservative priorities to pass.
Trump is bossing out the RINOs, the sellouts, the grifters,
the bad Republicans in deep-red districts who insist on selling out and
undermining the larger cause. The Republican conference needed this kind of
cleaning out for a long time, and I am grateful.
Of course, Trump as the boss has had some misses. He bombed
during Election 2022, when all of his US Senate nominees challenging open seats
or Democratic incumbents exploded. This year in California, his endorsement frustrated
two Republican gubernatorial candidates from getting into the Top Two.
Nevertheless, Trump’s endorsement misfires are getting rarer
with each election cycle, and with Election 2026, we have witnessed TWO RINOs
get the boot, with clear assurances that stronger Republicans will take their
place. We can look back at 2010 and 2012, when the Tea Party Movement was
stretching its legs and learning to flap its wings. There were more devastating
misses, like the US Senate races in Delaware and Alaska, and then bigger US
Senate failures in Missouri and Indiana in 2012.
Republicans, following Trump’s more media-savvy messaging,
have learned to knock out the RINOs but maintain a more mainstream message. They
win the independents and some of the disaffected Democrats. State your MAGA
principles, but focus on the bread-and-butter issues, and you win more
elections.
Trump the Boss is calculating with long-term wins in mind,
not just the next election cycle. It’s about principled victory through
pragmatic means, ensuring that liberal Republicans, feckless consultants, and
retired GOP brass keep their mouths shut or go away.
Trump the Boss is also finishing off the left-leaning
podcasters, pundits, Woke Right wrecks who have spent more time targeting Jews
and Israel rather than focusing on the needs of America and Americans. Corporate
media did its best to prop up anti-Trump wannabe America First candidates, and
they have all crashed and burned.
Boss Trump’s current coalition is managing internal and
external opposition, but he’s trouncing the dying corporate media, decaying
academia, and fussy big business interests trying to get cheap labor. Trump has
maintained a warm and ready steady hand of leadership, pushing his agenda
through.
His aggressive stance has taught Republicans how to fight,
or has forced them to fight, or has forced them out because they fight him or
won't fight at all. That's what a good boss should do: Maintain the well-being of the party, ensure
that the mission is accomplished, and provide good standing for everyone so
that they're all getting the job done.
No comments:
Post a Comment