A severe weather warning this week forced the cancellation of a “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) virtual town hall featuring Donald Trump, Tulsi Gabbard, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The event, part of a series of joint appearances by the unlikely political allies, promised to tackle America’s obesity and chronic disease epidemics. Its postponement does nothing to dampen the peculiar buzz surrounding this new “Blue MAGA” super-team, which has sent shockwaves through the political establishment. But as this alliance takes shape, a question looms: will Trump ultimately betray his newfound ally?
It wouldn’t be the first time Trump has turned on a supporter. Just ask former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, who in 2016 went from being Trump’s primary opponent to his apparent surrogate before becoming his fiercest critic in what seemed like the blink of an eye. Denied a position in the new administration he helped elect, Christie serves as a cautionary tale for anyone entering Hurricane Trump’s path of political destruction — Kennedy included.
Kennedy’s recent endorsement of Trump seemed, at first glance, like a political U-turn. But a closer look reveals a more nuanced picture — one that tells us something important about the shifting tectonics of American politics.
The concept of “sheepdogging” in politics refers to the practice of using a populist candidate to herd voters toward an establishment pick. It’s a term that gained traction after Bernie Sanders’s 2016 primary run, when some accused him of ultimately steering his supporters to Hillary Clinton. It’s possible to see Kennedy playing a similar role for Trump, using his anti-establishment credibility to bring disillusioned Left-leaning and otherwise hard-to-classify progressive voters into the MAGA fold. But this strategy carries risks, particularly if Trump decides to discard Kennedy once he’s served his purpose.
At first glance, the two make for strange bedfellows. Kennedy has long railed against genetically engineered seeds and vaccine mandates, while Trump’s administration rolled out the controversial mRNA Covid-19 vaccines and made a number of regulatory changes that were favourable to the biotechnology industry. What’s more, Kennedy’s enduring environmental activism seems at odds with Trump’s climate change scepticism. Differences like these raise questions about the longevity of their partnership.
But the alliance becomes more comprehensible when viewed through the lens of anti-establishment sentiment. Both men have positioned themselves as outsiders fighting against a “rigged system” and an entrenched “deep state”. In that light, Kennedy’s ongoing crusades against Big Pharma and what he sees as Government overreach during the Covid-19 pandemic align neatly with Trump’s “drain the swamp” rhetoric and scepticism of broad-stroke public health measures such as lockdowns.
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