A nightmare scenario looms over the Republican primaries
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — With the next U.S. presidential election just over a year and a half
away, candidates are already jockeying for pole position. Well, at least on the
Republican side. The Democrats are still wrestling over whether to cling to
80-year-old Joe Biden for another four years or try to find someone else who
would actually stand a chance against the GOP.
What about banking on current Vice President Kamala Harris, you might be one of
the rare few to ask. On average, 7 percent more voters now disapprove of Harris’
job performance than approve of it — a figure that has been rising since
September 2021. Although the incumbent vice president is typically a shoe-in to
succeed the boss in the event that they don’t stand for re-election, Harris is
an exception. At the rate that her popularity continues to tank, the GOP could
run a houseplant against a Harris candidacy and win. And the houseplant at least
produces oxygen while Harris tends to suck it out of the room on the rare
occasions when she’s even visible.
Perhaps there’s a strategy at play not to overshadow Biden or make it look like
she was biding her time until he was gone. But no one really knows what kind of
leader Harris would actually be. Her recent showing at the Munich Security
Conference last month was reduced to belting out the greatest hits of the
Washington bureaucrats. The talking points were delivered with all the finesse
of a Big Mac combo tossed through a car window at the drive-thru.
The Democrats’ shallow bench is the Republican Party’s strength. What they do
with the golden opportunity is another matter. Former President Donald Trump has
still “got it” in the sense that there’s still an affinity for his ideas. If
only he could get out of his own way with the accompanying drama.
No president has ever taken the bureaucracy to task the way that Trump has — and
is still doing from the sidelines. "World War III has never been closer than it
is right now," he said in a recent online video vowing to "clean house of all of
the warmongers and America’s last globalists." Then Trump unleashed a truth bomb
that’s almost unthinkable coming from a former American president. “For decades,
we’ve had the very same people, such as (current Under Secretary of State for
Political Affairs) Victoria Nuland and many others just like her obsessed with
pushing Ukraine toward NATO, not to mention the State Department support for
uprisings in Ukraine,” Trump said. This should have been front page news
everywhere: “Former US President acknowledges deep state role in fomenting
foreign regime change in Ukraine.”
Trump isn’t wrong. Even NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg alluded recently
to the fact that the Ukraine conflict didn’t start when many think that it did.
“And the war in Ukraine did not start last February. It started in 2014. With
Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the attacks in Eastern Ukraine,” he said.
Of course, Russia’s intervention in Russophone Crimea followed the
Western-backed overthrow of the Ukraine government — which is exactly what Trump
alluded to in his remarks.
Trump knows where the establishment’s skeletons are buried, and is the only
president in recent history not to have started a war while in office. It’s no
wonder that they want to stop him from returning at all costs. There would be a
serious risk of peace breaking out. Which explains why John “Bomb Iran” Bolton
announced that he’s running.
Former South Carolina Governor and United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley is
another neocon in the same mold as Bolton who has announced a run. It’s
impossible to differentiate Haley’s statements from Biden’s or Bolton’s on
foreign policy.
Enter Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has almost all of Trump’s attributes
without the propensity to swing from the chandeliers — or whatever the social
media equivalent would be. DeSantis once criticized Trump on several fronts,
including foreign policy, but hasn’t been afraid to evolve. “I don’t think it’s
in our interest to be getting into a proxy war with China, getting involved over
things like the borderlands or over Crimea,” he said recently.
When it comes to holding back the tsunami of leftist social engineering that
risks flooding Western society, both Trump and DeSantis tick the same boxes.
But what if Trump and DeSantis split like-minded GOP primary voters, creating a
pathway to victory for a more establishment-friendly neocon like Bolton or
Haley? DeSantis and Trump are on the same team, whether they know it or not.
It’s time for them to start acting like it for the sake of the country’s future.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN