WSJ editorial board gives GOP a reality check: ‘Grievances of the Trump past’ are a losing formula for Republicans

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Anyone who doubts that Trumpism remains the dominant ideology of the Republican Party need only watch the speeches from the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference, which concluded in Orlando, Florida on Sunday, February 28. From Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri to Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas to former President Donald Trump himself, the event seldom strayed from its Culture War theme. The Wall Street Journal’s conservative editorial board analyzes the event in an editorial published on March 1, warning that if Trumpist “grievance” is going to be Republicans’ main focus in the months ahead, the GOP is in trouble.

“The CPAC crowd cheered (Trump’s) speech, which was largely a collection of greatest political hits,” the WSJ’s editorial board observes. “But if CPAC represented America, Mr. Trump would still reside in the White House, not Mar-a-Lago. He lost to Joe Biden, the old Democratic war horse, by 7 million votes. He also lost five states he carried in 2016, even Georgia. That’s the cold GOP reality as the former president seeks to dominate the party from exile and tease a 2024 comeback.”

During his CPAC 2021 speech, the WSJ’s editorial board notes, Trump “laid out his political enemies list and is clearly bent on revenge against anyone who voted to impeach or convict him or disagrees with his election claims” — and those “intra-party fights” will “sap GOP energy and resources when their priority now should be retaking Congress in 2022.” Continue reading.