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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Trump Day in Millington

The approach to the Millington Jetport Hangar, where Donald Trump was to speak on Saturday evening, was a long, slow crawl for miles of automobiles bumper-to-bumper. It had the look of Woodstock to it, and, at 5:45 p.m., the car queues were being diverted away from the main approaches by uniformed local officers of various kinds and onto a back road that emptied directly onto the tarmac. From there it was a not-too-longish trek by foot through a gated area where peddlers a-plenty were selling Trump paraphernalia and finally, through metal-processing points into the hangar.

Uncharacteristically for the presidential campaigns in this election year (and unlike Trump’s once or twice in New Hampshire when the snows fell hard), this event conformed fairly closely to the advance schedule. At roughly 6 p.m., the appointed time, Trump’s big private jet taxied up close to the massive hangar’s open area, where a speaking platform had been set up, and the huge crowd inside the hangar, easily numbering several thousand, let up a roar, simultaneous with the raising of a host of cell-phone cameras to capture the event.

There had been rumors that Trump would have a surprise guest, and, sure enough, down the ramp, along with Trump came New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, the recent presidential-campaign dropout whose endorsement of Trump on Friday had somewhat offset that day’s other big news meme, his brutal tag-team mugging by opponents Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz in Friday’s Republican debate in Houston, broadcast by CNN.

Even as Trump and his new bromance bud strode up to the speaking stand, the continually building roar gave sufficient proof that The Donald had lost no luster among these masses, a packed-in assembly of just-folks Americana, largely white to be sure, but otherwise running across various class, gender, and age lines, from cap-and-jeans blue-collarites to a generously sized section for people in wheel chairs to the likes of Steve Ehrhart, the dapper Liberty Bowl exec who pointed out that he had grown acquainted with Trump in New York, presumably in the course of some deal that must have redounded to the benefit of both.

Christie spoke first, issuing some preliminary blasts at Rubio and Cruz and making it clear to the crowd that his endorsement of Trump was something more than that, it was an enlistment in the same cause that had attracted the thousands of attendees.

And then there was Trump. It was the usual philippic, mixing boasts, such as a claim that “every poll” had shown that he had won “every debate” with his rivals with familiar insults of those rivals, especially of “little Marco” — depicted by Trump as a quivering, sweaty-wet about-ready-to-pass-out “choke artist” whom he had spotted overtly leaguing with Cruz in a conspiratorial handshake before Thursday’s debate — and a distancing of himself from the rest of the field, too, indeed from the whole of the GOP establishment, with a claim that he was ever “the nicest person” on any stage with any of them and proudly boasting that he was creating a new Republican Party, indeed a new American consensus, including Democrats and independents as well.

The crowd, which was plainly not the usual muster of political junkie-dom (though any number of local GOP regulars could be spotted here and there) was uproariously with him on all of this, chanting “Win! Win! Win!” along with Trump and delighting also in his disparaging of the ex-Mexican president Vincente Fox who had famously said on Fox News that Mexico would not pay for the “faw-king” wall Trump says he’ll build on the border. The crowd rejoiced at Trump’s mockery of Fox and his tut-tutting at the “f-bomb” usage, and it suddenly became possible to imagine this and future such crowds hailing threats against uppity nations, near and far, that might go beyond the employment of bricks and mortar and electric wire.

Not that Trump, who for the record is much more non-interventionist in a military sense than his fellow GOP contenders, sounded any violent note per se. Indeed, when, as often happens at one of his rallies, a protester began to chant against him from inside the hangar, he calmly directed the crowd to “get him out” but “don’t hurt him.” And so the crowd did, with its counter-chant morphing from “Trump! Trump! Trump!” to “Win! Win! Win!”And finally to “U.S.A.! U.S.A! U.S.A!”

Call it what else you will, but this is a movement.

Meanwhile, Rubio and Cruz, building on what they must have imagined to have been the great gains of the debate, were releasing their tax returns over the weekend in the apparent belief that they could shame Trump thereby and embarrass him in the eyes of the American electorate.

It was hard to imagine such a thought crossing the minds of those in these approving multitudes. In fact, it was absurd to think they would side with the battling Mambo Brothers or the IRS against their new idol — or hold him blameful for possibly gaming a system that has done them no favors.

Could Trump, as he had boasted, actually get away with shooting someone at high noon on Fifth Avenue? With these supporters, he might. Not with the law, but — to say it again — Trump is come not to uphold the law but to abolish it.

Finally, there was the after-speech rope line, with Trump spending serious person-to-person time with each beseecher that handed him a cap or a poster or even an American flag to sign or smiling for the inevitable selfie. All the while there were desperate cries of “Mr. Trump! Mr. Trump!” from people trapped behind secondary rope lines further back, still hopeful, despite evidence to the contrary, that they, too, might get close enough to touch or be touched.

 

And then, finally, he was aboard the plane and gone, off on his quest to Make America Great Again, no doubt secure in his conviction that the minions he left behind in the Memphis area would go to the polls on Super Tuesday, just three days away, and do the right thing by him.

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Editorial Opinion

Can the Tennessee GOP Wise Up?

Is there hope for the Tennessee Republican Party? It’s fairly well established that the party’s establishmentarians are waging war with Tea Party insurgents for control of what, in the wake of the Civil War more than a century ago, was

once called the “Grand Old Party.”

These days the adjective “grand” would surely occur only to the most rabid of

Republican partisans as a self-description.

The Republican congressional wing has long since settled into a mode of obstructionism that would cause such leading Republicans of yore as Theodore Roosevelt and Robert La Follete to roll over in their graves — and they may have done so, a plausible explanation of earthquakes and weather disturbances for those party Neanderthals who decline to accept the evidence for climate change.

In any case, the past weekend here in Tennessee witnessed the revival — however tentative — of what seemed to be actual bipartisan sentiment among Republican spokespersons. The occasion was the visit to Tennessee of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who stopped off in Memphis on Friday to boost the reelection prospects of Senator Lamar Alexander, before heading off to Nashville as the featured speaker of the state Republicans’ annual “Statesmen’s Dinner.”

It’s not just what Christie said — which was interesting enough — but what some of his red-state Tennessee hosts said in the shadow of the blue-state Republican governor’s still substantial presence.

Here is Alexander attempting to characterize his home-state party: “We’ve kept an open door, tolerated differences of opinion, and listened to everybody.” If “huh?” was the only appropriate response to that bit of wishful thinking, here’s how the senator described Christie: “He’s proud to be a Republican, but he also is a good enough governor to earn the respect and support and votes of independents, Democrats, and Republicans, just as our candidates do in Tennessee.” (They do?)

All that, however, was a warm-up for Christie himself, who endorsed Alexander against Tea Party challenger Joe Carr thusly: “I want to stand next to people like Lamar Alexander as often as I can, to remind Republicans, independents, and Democrats that the problems in our country are not partisan problems, they’re American problems, and we need to come together as a country to fix them. And we’re not going to do it by continuing to have the kind of divisive activity you see by some folks in both parties in Washington, D.C. The good news for Tennessee is, all of you are smart enough not to send anybody like that to the United States Senate. And let’s not start getting dumb like that now, okay? We don’t need to do that. Let’s stay smart, and Senator Alexander is somebody who brings people together.”

Lest anyone miss Christie’s drift, he said more of the same in Nashville. Apropos the process of governing, for example: “I don’t know when compromise became capitulation. I don’t know when it became wrong to talk to the people on the other side of the aisle and become their friends.”

We’re not credulous, but we like the sound of that paean to bipartisanship. Can they keep it up?