Ron Brownstein: “Congressional Republicans may be engaged in the political equivalent of a murder-suicide by abetting Donald Trump’s claims that the election was stolen from him. By reinforcing Trump’s baseless narrative that he actually won the vote, Republicans could be suffocating President-elect Joe Biden’s already-slim chances of attracting any meaningful support from rank-and-file Republican voters, which will make it much tougher for him to build bipartisan coalitions in Congress. But by supporting Trump’s claims—either overtly or through their silence—Republicans are simultaneously cementing his position as the dominant figure in the GOP, snuffing out their chances of reconsidering the course he has set for their party.”
“‘Clearly, a lot of Republicans in Congress hoped that the election would be a bookend to Trump’s influence in the party,’ the GOP consultant Alex Conant told me. ‘By allowing this episode to prolong, it’s created a near certainty that his influence will persist.’ The longtime GOP strategist Bill Kristol, a leading Trump critic, says this dynamic shows how deeply Trumpism is engrained in the party. It increases ‘the chances of mindless partisan opposition to Biden and a refusal to repudiate conspiracy theorists,’ Kristol told me. ‘It just makes for a more extremist Trumpism party even if Trump retires from politics on January 20.'”