"Could these positions also serve as bedrock for a broader political movement undergirding a governing coalition for the future? We don't know because Trump has proved himself incapable of building any such governing coalition. Besides, as he has proved recently, it's tough to disguise buffoonery in a crisis. But not all of Trumpism is divorced from intelligent thinking, and some of it will still be out there, beckoning a politician, even perhaps a thinking politician, interested in building that coalition."
Robert W. Merry at The American Conservative tries to answer the question.
And Tim Miller at The Bulwark reviews Dan Crenshaw's Fortitude.
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
A Trumpism without Trump?
Labels:
2010s,
books,
political history,
politics,
Reagan,
Trump,
twenty-first century
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