Are we really doing this again?
On Tuesday, Donald Trump threw his hat into the ring for 2024. The announcement came one day after he defied the House Jan. 6 committee’s subpoena for testimony about the U.S. Capitol insurrection his supporters attempted.
Trump’s announcement Tuesday didn’t have a backlit entrance or a bizarre descent on an escalator. Instead, it was perhaps, to borrow a Trump phrase, the most “low energy” speech of his career. Minute after minute, he droned on. “This is something I don’t need,” he admitted at one point, “and a lot of you people don’t need, either.” After nearly 40 minutes, perhaps sensing how bored his audience was, he urged them to sit down. Even Fox News cut away. “We’re going back to President Trump,” said host Laura Ingraham, “when news warrants.”
“This is something I don’t need,” Trump admitted at one point, “and a lot of you people don’t need, either.”
It wasn’t just Trump’s tired delivery that made the speech so boring. It was the fact that there was nothing new: no real policies to fight inflation, no long-awaited pivot to the center. “Cheating” in the 2020 election, the “invasion” at the border, Hillary Clinton’s emails, “globalists” — all the old hits were played, and most of the dog whistles were blown.
Trump’s commitment to staying the course is mildly surprising only because the GOP’s midterm disappointments mean many in the party have the knives out for him. Many of Trump’s favorites — Kari Lake, who ran for governor in Arizona; Mehmet Oz, who ran for the Senate in Pennsylvania — lost. And even many of those who won — such as J.D. Vance in Ohio — underperformed. Independents recoiled from Trumpian hatreds and election denialism. From cable news to Capitol Hill, anti-Trump Republicans are becoming more vocal — though many, tellingly, still hide behind anonymous quotes. And in Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump’s opponents may have the candidate to rally around that they never had in 2016.
But it’s no surprise Trump is trotting out the same old trash. The core of his appeal, after all, includes a refusal to admit failure. As Trump said before Tuesday’s results came in: “I think if they win, I should get all the credit. If they lose, I should not be blamed at all.”









