It's an interesting question. There was an interesting discussion on the topic at NRO. I was more persuaded by what I was articulating last week -- people tend to side with the party, not the ideas. In Trump's case, "Trumpism" is, in almost no way, ideological (or coherent). It is, in nearly every way, a cult of personality. His base loves TRUMP. His base isn't going anywhere.
The folks he pisses off are, you know, actual, legitimate Rs. Kevin Williamson -- heh -- wrote about how, "go figure, the New York Democrat is a New York Democrat." But those aren't the "big tent" Rs. Those are people who are already Rs and have already had to compromise/hold their nose and vote for DJT.
So, I'm leaning more to the side of the argument that the folks he brought to the R party aren't going anywhere while the folks who already don't like him have already voted for him once as the least bad option and will likely do so again.
All that said, in the states where it matters, it's still the economy. If it's all sunshine and fucking rainbows no one will really care if you've switched course a dozen times. As long as you get there.
It'll be really interesting to watch.
The folks he pisses off are, you know, actual, legitimate Rs. Kevin Williamson -- heh -- wrote about how, "go figure, the New York Democrat is a New York Democrat." But those aren't the "big tent" Rs. Those are people who are already Rs and have already had to compromise/hold their nose and vote for DJT.
So, I'm leaning more to the side of the argument that the folks he brought to the R party aren't going anywhere while the folks who already don't like him have already voted for him once as the least bad option and will likely do so again.
All that said, in the states where it matters, it's still the economy. If it's all sunshine and fucking rainbows no one will really care if you've switched course a dozen times. As long as you get there.
It'll be really interesting to watch.
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