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The Horrible Humbling of Scott Walker

You know all that #NeverTrump talk? #NeverMind, says the intimidated governor.

John Nichols

July 21, 2016

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker applauds during the nomination process at the 2016 Republican National Convention.(Reuters / Jonathan Ernst)

ClevelandUntil Donald Trump got into the 2016 Republican presidential race, Scott Walker was kind of a big deal.

In June 2015, polls had Walker leading in the race for the Republican presidential nomination—and the governor of Wisconsin was leading the field in key primary and caucus states.

But once Trump targeted Walker—in the first of his brutal takedowns of Republican rivals—the Wisconsinite’s presidential bid crashed and burned. Quite horribly.

The horror was not complete until Wednesday night, however, when Walker appeared on the stage of the Republican National Convention that he had hoped would be nominating him this year. Instead of enjoying the accolades, he was embracing the candidacy of the man he once decried and denounced. Unlike Texas Senator Ted Cruz, the movement conservative who refused to compromise with the Trump campaign’s demands for partisan obedience (and, in so doing, created some actual political drama), Walker bowed to the new boss of the Grand Old Party.

Politics requires humbling performances from its losers—especially those who, like Walker, harbor ambitions for contests yet to come. But rarely has a politician been more humbled than the governor of Wisconsin was when he swallowed his own words and spit out an endorsement of Republican presidential nominee Donald John Trump.

It was the end of a painful journey for the Wisconsinite who had professed his presidential ambitions with a campaign book titled Unintimidated. Walker wanted Republicans to believe that he was a political tough guy—the Reaganite conservative who won a blue state and then busted its unions.

But then Walker ran up against an actual political tough guy.

The Wisconsinite did not go quietly. He campaigned for an agonizing few months as an ardent, if unsuccessful, Trump trasher.

When Trump disparaged Arizona Senator John McCain—suggesting that the 2008 Republican presidential nominee was “not a war hero”—Walker ripped into the New Yorker.

“I unequivocally denounce him,” the governor said of the billionaire.

But Trump’s poll numbers kept going up, while Walker’s numbers kept declining.

Walker tried to trump Trump with carefully crafted attack lines.

Recalling Trump’s reality-TV show, Walker addressed Trump during a September debate at the Ronald Reagan Library in California saying, “Mr. Trump: We don’t need an apprentice in the White House, we have one right now. He told us everything we wanted to hear back in 2008. We don’t know who you are or where you’re going or if you can get the job done.”

The combination of a popular-culture reference and an unflattering comparison to President Obama—no favorite of the Republican crowd—drew a few gasps from the pundits. But it did not faze Trump, who shredded Walker and then went back to blasting Jeb Bush.

Walker’s poll numbers kept declining. And less than a week after the Reagan Library debate, the governor quit the competition.

He did so, he said, to stop Trump.

As Walker suspended his candidacy, he announced, “I encourage other Republican presidential candidates to consider doing the same—so that the voters can focus on a limited number of candidates who can offer a positive conservative alternative to the current front runner.”

Walker did his part, endorsing Texas Senator Ted Cruz in the Wisconsin primary and cheering on the last-ditch efforts of the so-called “#NeverTrump” movement in April and early May.

But Trump rolled over the last of his 16 Republican opponents and this week claimed the nomination. Some of the vanquished candidates who had been Trump trashers—South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, former Florida governor Jeb Bush, Ohio Governor John Kasich—skipped Trump’s convention. Cruz appeared, but he made only a noncommittal reference to Trump.

That angered Trump. But Cruz left with a shred of dignity. Not so for Walker. On Wednesday night, he was all-in for the guy who fired him from the 2016 presidential race.

The governor began his convention speech with the obligatory cheap shot at Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, echoing the ugliest sentiments of an ugly convention with a claim that “The simple truth is: Liberal Washington insiders created these problems. And Hillary Clinton is the ultimate liberal Washington insider. If she were any more on the ‘inside’ she’d be in prison.”

“America deserves better than Hillary Clinton,” said the Wisconsinite. “That is why we need to support Donald Trump and Mike Pence to be the next president and vice president.”

Walker did not stop there. While Cruz earned Trump’s wrath by suggesting that Republicans should “vote your conscience” in November, Walker decried talk among serious conservatives about backing a third-party contender such as Libertarian Gary Johnson.

“Let me be clear: A vote for anyone other than Donald Trump in November is a vote for Hillary Clinton,” declared Walker, who not that many months ago was griping about Clinton and Trump as “such poor choices.”

Translation: Remember all that #NeverTrump talk? Well, #NeverMind.

And what did Scott Walker get in return for his surrender on the third night of his party’s convention? A thank-you tweet from the nominee, which was polite enough—except for the fact that it tagged the wrong Scott Walker (a television anchor in New Orleans).

Even at a convention where Donald Trump has humbled an entire political party, it will never get any more humbling than that.

John NicholsTwitterJohn Nichols is a national affairs correspondent for The Nation. He has written, cowritten, or edited over a dozen books on topics ranging from histories of American socialism and the Democratic Party to analyses of US and global media systems. His latest, cowritten with Senator Bernie Sanders, is the New York Times bestseller It's OK to Be Angry About Capitalism.


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