Republicans could learn a thing or two from Vivek Ramaswamy.
His failed presidential campaign, I mean.
The entrepreneur announced late Monday that he was suspending his campaign after his weak showing in Iowa’s GOP caucuses. And he immediately backed Donald Trump’s candidacy. On that note, I think Ramaswamy’s campaign was chock-full of lessons about where things stand in GOP politics, so let’s do a post-mortem of sorts.
Here are my top takeaways from the Ramaswamy campaign.
The GOP’s youth movement is in trouble
For anyone hoping that the 38-year-old Ramaswamy might represent an insurgent youth movement in the GOP — one that could rival Trump’s movement — this campaign must have been wildly disappointing. The Indian American millennial trailed Trump, Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis among voters ages 17 to 29 in the Iowa caucuses, according to entrance polling. And he barely edged out Haley among voters who are 30 to 44 years old (his own age group).
I predicted Ramaswamy’s struggles with young voters, but it’s remarkable how a candidate so reliant on performative exhibitions of youth and virility (from awkward raps to shirtless posts) could fail so mightily at winning over young people — especially at a time when news outlets have been laser-focused on some candidates’ age and mental competence and voter concerns about both.








