Consider this recent you-gov poll on conspiracy theories.
The first obvious thing that jumps out is that Republicans have a much more serious problem with conspiracy theories and feral disinformation than do Democrats. Not exactly surprising, but it's always nice to find data that backs up your intuition.
Now take a look at these three questions...
There
are lots of interesting things to look at here but the big relevant
takeaways for me are that Republicans tend to be far more paranoid about the establishment and that a majority of them
believe that the election was stolen.
The
implications of this last point are huge. For one thing, these people
believe that Donald Trump was the legitimate winner. From that it
follows that January 6th could not have been an insurrection; instead,
it was actually an attempt to prevent an insurrection. Once you believe this,
all sorts of major events of the past couple of years are completely
inverted. Suddenly, the January 6th rioters become political prisoners.
The Jack Smith and Georgia investigations become nothing more than
politicized attempts to keep the rightful winner out of office. The near universal condemnation of the stolen election lie in the non-partisan
press becomes damning evidence of a vast leftist conspiracy, and the
fact that most Americans don't believe the lie proves that the
conspiracy has been frighteningly effective.
At
the risk of stating the obvious, having the majority of your party
believe that you actually won the last election and should be in office
now gives you a tremendous advantage in the primary. This is one of the
antibodies that Josh Marshall has mentioned that makes it all but
impossible for a challenger to take the nomination away from Donald Trump.
(this is not to say that Trump can't be taken out, just that
it would almost certainly require external forces like health issues or
big legal developments ).
The establishment question points out another almost insurmountable obstacle for those trying to knock the former president out before the general. Trump is seen, in many ways accurately, as the ultimate outsider candidate. This
presents challengers with something of a catch-22. In order to have any
chance of unseating Trump, they have to have the full support of the
Republican establishment, particularly in its now weakened state, but
if they are seen as having the support of the establishment, they don't
have any chance of unseating Trump. This is particularly a problem for the mainstream media's flavor of the month.
Nikki Haley’s Rocket Ride to Second Place
December 2, 2023
In
April, Sarah Longwell of The Bulwark wrote what is still one of the
most insightful reports about the Republican electorate. Longwell,
strategic director of Republican Voters Against Trump, has sat through
hundreds of focus groups to understand the mental state of the party.
Her primary conclusion is that most GOP voters see the Trump era not as
an interregnum but as a kind of revolutionary event she calls “Year
Zero.”
“The
Republican party has been irretrievably altered,” she wrote, “and, as
one GOP voter put it succinctly, ‘We’re never going back.’” Such voters
have bought into Trump’s argument that the party leaders who preceded
him were weak losers. (This argument conveniently absolves Trump of
blame for his own losses — he was sabotaged by the Establishment, you
see.) “If you forged your political identity pre-Trump, then you belong
to a GOP establishment now loathed by a majority of Republican primary
voters,” she concluded. “Even if you agree with Trump. Even if you worked for Trump. Even if you were on Trump’s ticket as his vice president.”
Longwell
laid out a roster of Republican politicians whom the voters could never
accept for this reason. The first name on her list was Nikki Haley.
Even if Haley was running a good campaign (and in case you haven't been paying attention, she's not), the very things that make her so appealing to the establishment also make her toxic to a large portion of the GOP base.
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