Would Trump Resign as The Nation Gets Deeper into Coronavirus Without Help from Him?








There is been a lot of talk about The Donald quitting as things get worse for the nation and he decides to watch his hands from it all. The problem with this assumption or idea is that if you know Donald, he likes to take chances and he likes to push ahead until the whole building collapses in front of him like the Casinos in Las Vegas. Rich Lowry from Politico agrees with my statement:

After he’s repeatedly survived the unsurvivable, we are supposed to believe that President Donald Trump might quit the presidential race before it truly begins after a spate of negative polling.

This is the latest chatter among (unnamed) Republicans, according to a widely circulated Fox News report and to cable-news talking heads. 

Trump is a volatile figure and things could get weird if he’s far behind in the final weeks of the campaign. But the idea that he is going to fall on his sword because the conventional wisdom has turned sharply against his chances runs starkly counter to his predilections and past actions.

Good luck convincing Trump he’s going to lose after he survived the “Access Hollywood” tape that had GOP officeholders deserting him in droves and after he prevailed on an election night when many people closest to him and most invested in his victory thought he was sure to go down to defeat.

There’s nothing any political consultant, pollster or adviser can tell him about his dire political condition that he hasn’t heard, and dismissed, before.

If the polling looks bad for him now, Hillary Clinton had sizable leads in 2016, too.

Plus, there’s no reason for Trump to trust the polls, especially the state polls, when many of them were wrong in 2016 and the methodological issues—the over-sampling of college-educated voters—haven’t been resolved.

The assumption behind the Trump-might-drop-out chatter is that the president would want to avoid the psychological sting of a loss, but he’s already signaled how he’ll handle a defeat—by saying he was robbed.

With this rationalization in his back pocket, there’s no reason for Trump to forgo any chance whatever of remaining the most talked-about man on the planet for the next four years by dropping out based on early summer polling. 


The anonymous Republicans chattering about this scenario surely are wish-casting and assume some other—any other—GOP presidential candidate would be better for the party’s chances. This, too, is doubtful.

How would the great drop-and-switch even work? The party would be implicitly conceding that the incumbent Republican president was such a disaster that he couldn’t even run for a second term—and then turn around and ask voters for four more years of yet another Republican president.

One of the points of this exercise would be to repudiate Trump, but how could the party plausibly do that after loyally and enthusiastically backing him for four years? Who would be a turn-the-page candidate? The natural successor would be Vice President Mike Pence, but he’s obviously more associated with Trump than any other figure in the party besides the president’s direct relatives.

How about a Trump critic, say, Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse? But such a choice would be whiplash-inducing change of direction for a party led the moment before by Trump.

The president’s base wouldn’t go away even if Trump said he wasn’t running again, and its feelings would have to be taken into account—not to mention that Trump loyalists would make up a disproportionate share of Republican convention delegates, who would presumably make the choice of a new candidate.

At a time of great populist passion in the GOP, deciding on a presidential candidate without the direct say of any voters would be fraught with peril, to say the least—and more likely to produce a civil war than comity.

Then, there’s the question of Trump himself. Unless the Trump-stepping-aside scenario becomes even more implausible and involves him resigning the presidency and getting dropped off by Marine One at a monastery to begin a four-month silent retreat, he’s not going to quietly abide some other Republican soaking up all the public attention that comes with being one of two people who will be the next president of the United States. 

Headlines from around the nation:

*Duckworth to hold up confirmations to ensure impeachment witness Vindman's promotion isn't blocked
*Tucker Carlson 2024? The GOP is buzzing
*Conservative lawmaker demands White House disband coronavirus task force
*The week that shook the Trump campaign
*Trump surrogate Herman Cain hospitalized with coronavirus weeks after attending Tulsa rally
Advertisement (The day before he called for ending face masks. I Wonder what he thinks now?

Perhaps Joe Biden indeed has a durable 10-point lead, in which case there’s nothing the GOP can do to avoid a terrible drubbing. If Biden is that strong, some emergency replacement Republican candidate—hastily chosen amid a political panic—isn’t going to win, either.

It’s more likely, though, that the race will naturally tighten and Trump will be behind, but within range and have a puncher’s chance.

The past three months have been dreadful for the president and nothing he’s used against Biden has worked, but campaigning is an iterative process—if one tack doesn’t work, it’s on to the next one, until something gets traction.

Everything we know about Trump says he’ll keep at this with relish, and that there’s no way he quits without even trying to win the ultimate vindication for any president, and the ultimate repudiation of his critics.

By RICH LOWRY

Rich Lowry is editor of National Review and a contributing editor with Politico Magazine.



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