The Never Trumpers Are Clear on Their Goal
A determined group will do whatever it takes to keep him out of office—including planning to support Kamala Harris.
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The choice of Donald Trump versus Kamala Harris is proving to be a remarkably easy one for the Never Trumpers who really meant never.
First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic:
- The most revealing moment of a Trump rally
- “This is the worst police-shooting video ever.”
- What adults lost when kids stopped playing the street
A Sense of Coherence
When the Never Trump movement emerged, in 2016, it wasn’t always clear what never meant. For some anti-Trump Republicans, it simply meant a short, shameful interval before falling back in line with their party. Others couldn’t bring themselves to vote for Hillary Clinton and sat out the election. But a notable remnant meant never as in “absolutely never.” As the threat of a second Donald Trump presidency grows more imminent, that remnant seems to have hardened its resolve to do whatever it needs to do to keep him out of office—including planning to support the presumptive Democratic nominee, Kamala Harris.
For some observers, the idea of conservative-leaning Americans voting for Harris is unthinkable. “For Never Trump or Trump reluctant conservatives the Harris nomination is a catastrophic development,” the American Enterprise Institute fellow and Washington Post columnist Marc Thiessen declared in a post on X. “At least Biden pretended to be a moderate,” he wrote. But now, he argued, Never Trump Republicans have to choose between Trump and Harris, whom Thiessen described as the “most left wing Democratic presidential nominee in modern times,” adding, bizarrely, that she was “a Democratic Socialist who is to the left of Bernie Sanders.”
Thiessen’s assessment of Harris is wholly exaggerated. The caricature is useful for the group that I have called anti-anti-Trumpers: those who claim to be Trump skeptics but find ways to rationalize his behavior by attacking his critics or those he’s up against. But at the core of Thiessen’s argument is the perception that Harris poses an impossible dilemma for Never Trump conservatives.
On paper, Thiessen might once have had a point. Before Trump, the ideological divide between Harris and conservative Republicans might have been too large to bridge. But this is not a normal campaign. For most Never Trump Republicans, the 2024 election is not primarily about the divide between the left and the right; it’s about preserving our liberal constitutional order. For years, Never Trumpers have been split between those who have remained conservative at the policy level and those who more or less transformed themselves into progressives. There were also differences of opinion within the movement about whether Joe Biden should step aside, but there was never any doubt about the existential threat Trump posed to the body politic.
Of course, many conservatives have their own issues with Harris’s policies—and, for that matter, have their issues with Biden’s. In an op-ed for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Geoff Duncan, the conservative Republican former lieutenant governor of Georgia, acknowledged that endorsing Harris “wasn’t easy. Through my conservative lens, I see very few policy areas where we agree.” But, he wrote, his “current north star is ridding” the GOP of Trump, and Harris is “the best vehicle toward preventing another stained Trump presidency.”
Trump’s July surge focused the mind of anti-Trump voters, perhaps usefully, on the very real prospect that he was about to return to power. Trump had been leading the polls for months, but the attempted assassination and the Republican National Convention boosted him into the most dominant political position of his lifetime. Meanwhile, the one candidate who stood between him and his future presidency of retribution was visibly floundering. For anti-Trump progressives, July felt like a near-death experience. Now the relief is staggering—for Never Trumpers too.
This past weekend, Venezuela’s strongman Nicolás Maduro very likely embraced election fraud to cling to power. In America, over the same weekend, a former president told supporters that if he returned to power, voting in future elections wouldn’t be necessary. “It’ll be fixed; it’ll be fine; you won’t have to vote anymore, my beautiful Christians,” Trump said at an event for religious conservatives in Florida on Friday. As Brian Klaas writes in The Atlantic, “Trump’s remarks represent an extraordinary departure from democratic norms in the United States—rarely, if ever, has a major party’s presidential candidate directly stated his aim to make elections meaningless, a notorious hallmark of autocracy.”
We’ll find out soon whether Never Trumpers can truly align around Harris, or if policy-related infighting will get in the way. Some Republicans may sit out the race in a cloud of above-it-all righteous irrelevance. But at least the staunchest members of the movement seem to be cohering around support for Harris. For Never Trumpers who have been in the political wilderness for nearly a decade now, this is not the time to quibble over tax rates, the Green New Deal, fracking, or pronouns.
Harris is far from their first choice, but when your kitchen is in flames, you reach for whatever extinguisher is at hand. You can worry later about washing the dishes or whether you need a new garbage disposal. Put the fire out now.
Related:
Today’s News
- President Biden proposed changes to the Supreme Court, including establishing term limits and adding a constitutional amendment that would limit presidential immunity.
- Venezuelan election officials declared that President Maduro won Venezuela’s election, but widespread concerns persist over the legitimacy of the election results.
- Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said yesterday that Turkey might enter Israel to help Palestinians. In response, Israel’s foreign minister called on NATO to expel Turkey.
Dispatches
- Work in Progress: Derek Thompson examines what’s really behind America’s gender war.
- The Wonder Reader: The curse of perfectionism leaves people trying to be the best, even at things for which the concept is inapplicable, Isabel Fattal writes.
Explore all of our newsletters here.
Evening Read
Silicon Valley’s Trillion-Dollar Leap of Faith
By Matteo Wong
Silicon Valley has already triggered tens or even hundreds of billions of dollars of spending on AI, and companies only want to spend more. Their reasoning is straightforward: These companies have decided that the best way to make generative AI better is to build bigger AI models. And that is really, really expensive, requiring resources on the scale of moon missions and the interstate-highway system to fund the data centers and related infrastructure that generative AI depends on … The global data-center buildup over the next few years could require trillions of dollars from tech companies, utilities, and other industries, according to a July report from Moody’s Ratings.
Now a number of voices in the finance world are beginning to ask whether all of this investment can pay off.
More From The Atlantic
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- About every 500 years, a major quake body-slams middle America.
- California’s fire luck just ran out.
- Anxiety is like exercise.
- Dear Therapist: I inherited unwanted family secrets.
- This was the best opening ceremony Paris could give us?
Culture Break
Watch. Comedian Jacqueline Novak’s special, Get on Your Knees (streaming on Netflix), which delivers rapid-fire laughs.
Read. “Athena,” a poem by Cynthia Zarin:
“As you imagined me, I came / to you, near as the sound of an owl / in the clearing, then nearer … ”
Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.
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