Imagine a world in which Donald Trump never ran for president.
For a few brief stretches during Thursday’s GOP debate, which Trump boycotted over a feud with Fox News, it was almost possible to see it. The candidates were less combative early on, and there were longer and more substantive answers on policy, like Rand Paul discussing Ferguson and Jeb Bush talking about veterans’ issues. There was a lot less spectacle and even fewer ad hominem attacks.
For candidates like Bush, whose debates have often been defined by confrontations with Trump, the front-runner’s absence allowed them to get their message out clearer and more confidently than ever before. In fact, with the exception of Dr. Ben Carson, almost everyone seemed to have more pep in his step than usual.
But, as we’ll explore below, the debate was still defined by the missing candidate in certain key ways.
There was no Trump pile-on …
Trump’s absence presented a challenge to the candidates. Attack him while he’s not there, and you might look weak. Leave him alone, and you might miss the last chance to drag him down from his leading position in the polls before Monday’s caucus.
Candidates mostly decided on the latter option when confronted with questions about Trump at the beginning, cracking jokes but then mostly moving on.
“I’m a maniac and everyone on this stage is stupid, fat, and ugly, and Ben, you’re a terrible surgeon,” Ted Cruz said. “Now that we’ve gotten the Donald Trump portion out of the way…”
And that was it from Cruz, who has been attacking Trump relentlessly on the trail this week otherwise. The senator has to hope his own highlights and whatever backlash Trump gets for skipping out (if there is any) can reverse his polling slide. Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler told reporters afterward that Trump’s absence “spoke for itself.”
Jeb Bush joked he missed Trump, who “was a little teddy bear to me.” But rather than use that line to pivot to an attack on Trump, he instead chastised his rivals for not attacking Trump themselves. “Everyone else was in the witness protection program when I went after him,” he complained.
… but Trump never really left.
Washington Post reporter Ed O’Keefe asked Cruz after the debate if he missed having Trump around.
“He’s always with us,” Cruz responded.
Ran into Cruz in the Marriott lobby. Asked him if he missed Trump. "He's always with us," he said.
— Ed O'Keefe (@edatpost) January 29, 2016
One reason it was so hard to pretend Trump wasn’t in the room is that — as becomes clearer every debate — candidates have absorbed so many of his positions and rhetoric. Trump may have been gone, but Trumpism hung in the air.
The main fireworks were on immigration, a topic in which almost everyone on stage had at least flirted with more moderate views in a less heated time for the party. With the issue turbocharged by Trump, they now lobbed the toughest attacks of the night at each other over the issue, regardless of their current or former position.
RELATED: GOP hopefuls face toughest grilling on immigration yet
Bush, who supports a pathway to legal status for immigrants but whose super PAC is running ads attacking Rubio’s “amnesty” bill, squared off with Rubio, who was confronted by the moderators with clips of him pledging not to pursue a path to legal status as a Senate candidate.
“You used to support a path to citizenship,” Rubio shot at Bush.









