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Asa Hutchinson was never going to be the 2024 Republican presidential nominee, much less the nation’s 47th president.
In another time, before Donald Trump became the blob that swallowed the Republican Party, the former Arkansas governor would have been, at the least, a serious factor in the contest.
His experience — as a Reagan-appointed U.S. attorney, former House member, high-level member of the George W. Bush administration — was the sort of check-the-box ascent that marked the resumes of many successful presidential contenders. Hutchinson even acted as a congressional prosecutor in President Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial, burnishing his bona fides as a partisan combatant.
What’s striking is not the predictable failure of Hutchinson’s campaign, which ended Wednesday after he finished light-years behind Trump in the Iowa caucuses. Rather, it was the response from the Democratic National Committee.
“This news comes as a shock to those of us who could’ve sworn he had already dropped out,” DNC Press Secretary Sarafina Chitika said in a statement dripping with snark and condescension.
Even more striking was the response that followed the mean-spirited takedown.