Biden came out swinging against Trump on Jan. 6, which enraged the former president, but something notable happened: Few Republicans stood up for Trump. Many tried the delicate balance of condemning the insurrection attempt on Jan. 6 but not the guy responsible for propagating the Big Lie and inciting the rioters to action. It seems some have finally had enough.
GOP Senator Mike Rounds (R-SD) was fed up with Trump’s ego when he appeared on This Week. He said what every non-cultish person already knew: "The [2020] election was fair. As fair as we have seen."
This was followed by Mitt Romney, who will always stand up for what’s right—after someone else does it first:
Then, Senators Kevin Cramer, John Thune, and Shelley Capito backed him. Even Trumpy Senator Ron Johnson said Trump lost—though he said it only in private, and was caught on tape.
I'm not giving many props to Mitch McConnell, who immediately condemned the Big Lie last year but is happy to capitalize on the conspiracy to support state-level voting restrictions that he believes will help Republicans. Anything to hold onto power, I suppose.
Then I watched a Fox News host pile on:
Everyone with the slightest degree of common sense knows Trump can’t handle losing. He said the Emmys were rigged, he said the popular vote in 2016 was rigged, and he even said Ted Cruz’s Iowa caucus victory was rigged. How you rig a caucus when the people are publicly counted in front of everyone remains unclear, but this was never supposed to make sense. No one ever explained who was doing the rigging, or how millions of “fraudulent” ballots were cast for Biden along with Republicans in all the down-ballot races.
Yet, instead of believing that the guy who claims to get tweets from parents of Korean War vets is lying, Republicans expect us to believe that all the poll workers, Republican state legislators, the media, Republican governors, Bill Barr, election officials, and all of the judges—including those who were appointed by Trump—who threw out more than 60 frivolous or unfounded cases were all in a giant conspiracy to help Joe Biden beat Trump.
The GOP leaders were so terrified of Trump, they actually tried to make this seem plausible—and at great cost to their reputations. Shame, however, is something you need to dispense with if you want to be a Republican official or pundit these days.
The GOP is turning on Trump’s Big Lie, but not because they suddenly got patriotic. These guys aren’t doing it because they want to save Democracy. It’s because, in Kilmeade’s own words, if “we simply look back and tell our people, ‘Don’t vote because there’s cheating going on,’ then we’re going to put ourselves in a huge disadvantage.”
He’s right. The Big Lie may soothe Trump’s ego, but if the people he picks in the midterms lose and are told it was rigged, his cult of followers will wonder what the point of voting is. The only turnout depressed by the Big Lie is the base Republicans rely on. It’s a lose-lose proposition for Trump, but he’s too arrogant and dumb to change course. He all but said at an unofficial campaign stop that he’s going to run on his 2020 election loss because that gets the “biggest applause” at his (increasingly sparsely attended) rallies.
As Trump begins to lose steam, Republican leaders are finally beginning to break ranks. Trump’s cult seems to be open to following other authoritarian leaders—leaders that Republican politicians hope won’t be as selfish and self-destructive the next time around.