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Op-Ed

GOP Rep. Gaetz Can Carry the MAGA Banner After Trump

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President Donald J. Trump is the most popular Republican leader since at least President Ronald Reagan.

The grueling fights he has endured against the Democratic Party, the fake news media, the deep state, Hollywood celebrities and other cultural cancers have strengthened his bonds with conservatives who see him as the champion for whom they have yearned for decades.

President Trump has restored a certain swagger to the American right. This self-confidence had been missing as the Bushes, John McCain and Mitt Romney sucked the life out of the Grand Old Party. Trump also has attacked the left with a seldom-seen effectiveness, essentially becoming a human kryptonite that brings Democrats to their knees.

Often lost in the euphoria of the Trump movement, though, is what will follow the president, and who will be the standard-bearer who can build upon his legacy and its lasting imprint upon America.

Trump’s governing style offers both benefits and drawbacks. Chief among the latter is his unpredictable philosophy.

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On Monday, bringing the GIs home from Syria will Keep America Great. On Tuesday, fresh troops head to Saudi Arabia, for possible war with Iran.

On Wednesday, protecting jobs for native-born Americans is the central pillar of the MAGA agenda. On Thursday, the key to economic growth is the importation of Third-World electronic engineers to boost the profits of the tech giants and their monopoly platforms that de-platform Trump supporters.

Here is the mega-question for MAGA-era conservative intellectuals: Will Trumpism be a flash in the pan, or will it permanently revolutionize the American right?

While “Make America Great Again,” “Keep America Great,” “Make America Even Greater” and “America First” are all excellent slogans, they need substance behind them in order to yield post-Trump staying power.

Do you think Rep. Gaetz would make a good leader for the Republican Party?

Trump’s forceful personality has triggered a political realignment, but it must be a starting point, not a finish line.

Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz is a leader who provides a coherent policy framework for the MAGA agenda. To him, “America First” isn’t just a new brand to repackage stale neoliberalism within the Republican Party. He actually wants to move the GOP permanently in a nationalist, conservative direction.

This shift is vital to save the GOP and the USA from extinction.

Gaetz displayed remarkable foresight and political acumen with his controversial vote in favor of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s resolution limiting President Trump’s war powers on Iran. As Gaetz was one of only three Republican lawmakers to support the California Democrat’s measure, the move certainly was unpopular among his solid-Right base. His vote reportedly has put him on the outs with the White House, which surely is angry that Gaetz chose to undermine Trump’s authority.

But the president, like many of his devoted supporters, is missing the point entirely.

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Gaetz understands that war and peace are much larger than President Trump or today’s tensions with Iran.

Gaetz’s concerns involve the endless conflicts in which the United States has been bogged down since just after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks. These Middle Eastern wars have grown increasingly unpopular with everyone, beyond perhaps the Fox News faithful.

From Bush in Afghanistan and Iraq to Obama in Libya and Syria, and now Trump with Iran, the president essentially has assumed unilateral authority to wage war. This is not how the Founding Fathers designed this republic.

Unlike Sen. Rand Paul — who denigrated Trump’s fatal drone strike against Iranian General Qassem Soleimani and opposes war with Iran — Gaetz does not approach war prevention as a non-interventionist ideologue, but rather as an “America First” pragmatist.

Gaetz vocally defended the Soleimani strike but understands that any further escalation could create another trillion-dollar quagmire. Thus, President Trump, like all other commanders in chief, should be restrained by the Constitution.

While Gaetz’s position might cause him some immediate political damage, it will bolster his long-term credibility. His vote shows that he is in tune with popular sentiment on this issue.

A recent survey found that 71 percent of Americans want to avoid war with Iran. Gaetz avoided the “Let’s go to war!” fervor that caused Republicans to support the disastrous Iraq mission, a conflict that President Trump has called the worst blunder in U.S. history.

The anti-war candidate has won the last three presidential elections, and that is likely to happen again in 2020.

Gaetz understands that forever wars cannot be part of the America First movement.

This makes him the top choice to become its standard-bearer after President Trump flies Air Force One on his final, beautiful, very special trip to Mar-a-Lago.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.

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Gavin Wax is the 73rd president of the New York Young Republican Club, chairman of the Association of Young Republican Clubs, digital director of the Young Republican National Federation and an associate fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.
Gavin Wax is the 73rd president of the New York Young Republican Club, chairman of the Association of Young Republican Clubs, digital director of the Young Republican National Federation and an associate fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.




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