Donald Trump Is Still a Campaign Issue – Governing

Posted: May 15, 2022 at 10:09 pm

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Trumps Still a Campaign Issue: The former presidents track record in terms of GOP primary endorsements this year continues to be impressive. His favored candidates have now won 39 out of 40 races. Granted, most of his picks have faced token opposition at most, but other than Charles Herbsters loss in Nebraskas gubernatorial primary, Trump is undefeated, including a big win in a West Virginia congressional contest Tuesday.

That doesnt mean the old-guard GOP establishment is totally defenseless, however. Herbster lost to Jim Pillen, who was backed by term-limited Gov. Pete Ricketts. Last week, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine who Trump called a terrible, terrible guy at a pre-election rally won nomination to a second term. Next Tuesday, Idaho Gov. Brad Little looks like a reasonably safe bet at this point against Trump endorsee Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin. Later in the month, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp a particular target of Trumps wrath for his role in certifying President Bidens 2020 Georgia win is looking strong in his primary against former Sen. David Perdue.

Democrats are hoping that Republicans will nominate candidates who are too extreme to win in November. In some gubernatorial races, including Pennsylvanias primary next week, Democrats are doing their best to guide Republican voters toward the candidates they think least likely to win general elections. GOP primaries are now a race to the right where the more extreme the candidate, the likelier they are to win, says Christina Polizzi, press secretary for the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.

She points to an example from Michigan last week, where Democrat Carol Granville beat Robert Regan in a solidly Republican state House district. Polizzi suggests candidates such as Regan give Democrats a chance, even in tough districts. Maybe. He may have been a special case, however, notorious for calling Jews the real virus and suggesting to his daughters, If rape is inevitable, you should just lie back and enjoy it. Some Michigan Republicans disavowed him, which clearly will not be the dynamic in most races.

A lot of these candidates bill themselves as anti-RINO the derisive acronym for Republicans in name only and one of them went around with RINO hunter tee-shirts, says Ed Feigenbaum, editor of the newsletter Indiana Legislative Insight. At the legislative level, this Liberty Defense group was really pushing candidates who were probably pro-Trump, but I didnt hear Trumps name mentioned in any of those races.

Instead, the candidates campaigned on no-nuance approaches to three issues constitutional carry legislation for firearms, full parental control over schools and medical freedom, also known as opposition to mandatory masks, vaccinations and other health measures. Because compromise ends up being part of nearly every legislative action, such candidates cause headaches for chamber leaders.

Thats why Indiana House Republicans targeted two such sitting members, one with a half-million-dollar campaign treasury, the other by deliberately placing him in a district with another incumbent through redistricting. The House Republicans decided to oppose some of their own, really for the first time, in the primaries, Feigenbaum says.

Souls in Disarray: Ive been doing this kind of work long enough that I can remember writing a cover story for Congressional Quarterly about primary contests that we billed as a battle for the soul of the GOP a quarter-century ago. That descriptor still gets used all the time. Just in recent weeks, The New Republic, The New York Times, the Detroit Free Press and Bloomberg have all framed primary fights as soul struggles for the GOP.

The state of the Democratic soul doesnt receive the same kind of journalistic attention. Instead, fights among Democrats are often used as evidence that the party is in disarray, for instance by The Atlantic, Newsday and the Miami Herald. New York magazine even has a landing page helpfully displaying all articles tagged: Democrats In Disarray.

Copy and Paste: By now, its well-established practice for legislators not only to borrow ideas from their peers in other states, but to copy their homework. If an idea gets traction in one state, its likely that an identical or nearly identical bill will crop up elsewhere, often promoted by groups such as the American Legislative Exchange Council that spread model bills around like legislative Johnny Appleseeds.

It's something that opponents of these bills like to point out, insinuating out-of-state interest groups are hijacking the process. But is it a good idea in terms of achieving policy outcomes? A new study from Oklahoma State University suggests it is not.

Robert M. Dorrell Jr. and Joshua M. Jansa looked at policy plagiarism on three issues with measurable outcomes: organ donations, vaping bans for minors and school bullying. They found that the borrowed bills hampered policy achievements on the first two and were probably negative in terms of the third. The reason is pretty simple: One size really does not fit all. Homegrown bills are more likely to be custom-tailored to fit the individual state in question, while incorporating feedback and gaining support from stakeholders within it.

We are left with one clear takeaway, Jansa writes. States experience greater policy success when they adopt more original, less plagiarized legislation.

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Donald Trump Is Still a Campaign Issue - Governing

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