President Donald Trump has never bothered with pretense. He’s never pretended to care about the Republican Party as a set of ideas or ideologies. He’s never craved like-minded companions. He wants the adulation of the masses who identify with the Republican Party and the unwavering, unblinking loyalty of his fellow party members. There is no reciprocity — only an unending stream of homage and tribute can appease the self-styled emperor of the Grand Old Party.
Trump’s reign is coming to an end, but like past tyrants, he is refusing to see the writing on the wall. In the moments when he does admit his fate, it’s only in the context of his eventual return to power. As a result, Trump’s closing days in office are all about laying out one last gantlet of fealty to ensure his return to the White House in 2024. Any signs of dissent will result in his personally shivving the offender politically, kneecapping any threat to his absolute control of the Republican Party.
The “Surrender Caucus” within the Republican Party will go down in infamy as weak and ineffective “guardians” of our Nation, who were willing to accept the certification of fraudulent presidential numbers!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 4, 2021
If you think that’s an exaggeration, here’s how Politico described the chaos that Trump has created as he continues to insist that the election was rigged and party officials scramble to agree: “State party chairs are tearing into their governors. Elected officials are knifing one another in the back. Failed candidates are seizing on Trump’s rhetoric to claim they were also victims of voter fraud in at least a half dozen states.”
Any signs of dissent will result in Trump personally shivving the offender politically, kneecapping any threat to his absolute control of the Republican Party.
It’s the only logical endpoint to his takeover and subsequent reprogramming of the party. It’s not as though there’s been anything close to meaningful repercussions for his actions against his fellow Republicans since he first clinched the party’s nomination in 2016. He’s cowed his political rivals into total submission.
He’s continued to make millions of dollars even while holding office. And despite being, as The New Republic’s Matt Ford pointed out, absolutely terrible at politics and getting what he wants legislatively, he has remained convinced that there are no limits to his power as president.
And when the emperor’s clothing has been called out as nonexistent, rather than recede in shame like the fable’s embarrassed monarch, Trump has lashed out. Rank and length of service to the party are meaningless in Trump’s mind. No matter how many times a person has done him a favor, saved him from political defeat or, in the case of impeachment, voted to keep him in office, there is no “enough” for Trump. It’s the kind of thinking that demands that Senate Majority Whip John Thune face a primary challenge for correctly saying Congress can’t overturn the votes of the Electoral College. Correctly describing the emperor’s nakedness is an unpardonable sin.
Likewise, Sen. Tom Cotton stood up for Trump in the summer, arguing that the president’s response to the anti-police brutality protests needed to go even further, invoking military deployment as an option. But he has refused to line up behind the vanity challenge to the Electoral College results his colleagues have scheduled for Wednesday and so has found himself on the receiving end of a threatening Trump tweet.
How can you certify an election when the numbers being certified are verifiably WRONG. You will see the real numbers tonight during my speech, but especially on JANUARY 6th. @SenTomCotton Republicans have pluses & minuses, but one thing is sure, THEY NEVER FORGET!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 4, 2021
The president’s Twitter account is the high-decibel, 280-character version of a toxic partner’s whispers of “you are nothing without me.” He won’t be able to move markets and generally terrorize the masses with his Twitter account after Jan. 20, but unless Twitter decides to wrench it from him post-presidency, it’s still how he’ll ensure that the Republican Party can’t survive without him at its head, programming that truth into his millions of remaining followers.
Trump’s grip on the base, addicted to the rush of gorging on his ambrosial lies, is both his lifeline and his scourge. Democracy isn’t a goal to Trump; it’s a tool for harnessing the power of millions into being an instrument of his rage to punish and torment his enemies. It’s why, despite his middling track record in getting his endorsees elected, his threats to men like Thune and Cotton still carry weight.
There are plenty of elected officials who clearly worry that Trump is right. What is the GOP now without his charismatic calls for owning liberals and defending him from his attackers? Matt Continetti, the founder of the conservative Washington Free Beacon, mused about this in The New York Times last month and came up empty, finding the party a hollowed-out shell. “The Republican Party has embraced reality-TV authoritarianism not out of strength but weakness,” he wrote. “Mr. Trump is all it has.”








