Ex-Trump aide: 'The Republican Party is bigger than Trump'
Shani Rozanes
March 19, 2021
Former Rep. Jack Kingston, a Trump campaign advisor, is optimistic about the future of the Republican party. On DW's Conflict Zone, he denounced the attack on the US Capitol, saying "a lot of that has been misconstrued."
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The Trump presidency is over, but unity between Republicans and Democrats is nowhere in sight, says political advisor, lobbyist and former Georgia Congressman Jack Kingston: "We are still very mindful of what the Democrats did to Donald Trump. They did not accept his presidency."
"The truth of the matter is, though, that there is a lot of suspicion between the parties, and bitterness," he told host Tim Sebastian on Conflict Zone.
"I know the media is obsessed with Donald Trump hatred, but can you not see that this type of discussion, this type of rhetoric has been building for years in America? It's a sad thing."
"I think there's a lot of hyperbole … It's not really a lie. It's an opinion and it's an exaggeration," he later added.
Kingston said that Trump could have dealt better with the crowd that stormed Capitol Hill on January 6. "I think that a lot of that has been misconstrued. Donald Trump should have been more forceful when he said, 'go to the Capitol peacefully.' But he did say, 'go to the Capitol peacefully.'"
"I think that what these people did was absolutely outrageous. The Republican Party condemned it immediately," said Kingston.
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The future of the GOP
But Kingston was optimistic about the Republican Party's future: "The party right now, I think, is in a very good position. We will sort through the, kind of, the Trump and the non-Trump types in the party."
"History shows from Bush to Trump to Obama to Clinton that the party out of power will take back the House and the Senate. History is on our side."
So is the Grand Old Party now Trump's party? "I don't believe that it is. I think we're in a kind of a big tent situation. He's absolutely one of the dynamic leaders of the party. Case in point, ten of the House Republicans who voted for impeachment now have multiple candidates running against them."
"The Republican Party is bigger than Trump, but the media isn't. The media can't get over Donald Trump."
Kingston expressed "concerns" about Marjorie Taylor Greene, the newly-elected congresswoman and conspiracy theory-enthusiast, but "you're always going to have the variety of people who say and do stupid things," he said. "But they don't rule."
'Biden won'
Unlike some hardliners in his camp, Kingston admitted Biden won fair and square.
"Joe Biden won, I'm afraid to say, and they won it the old-fashioned way, through getting their people to the polls ... I did not like the outcome of it, but he did win it."
Pro-Trump protesters storm US Capitol: In pictures
Supporters of President Donald Trump breached the US Capitol as lawmakers gathered to count electoral votes. Here's a look at some of the chaotic scenes in Washington as rioters clashed with security forces.
Image: Leah Millis/REUTERS
Protesters and police clash
Supporters of US President Donald Trump clash with police officers in front of the Capitol Building in Washington DC on January 6. Congress was holding a joint session to ratify President-elect Joe Biden's Electoral College win over President Trump.
Image: Stephanie Keith/REUTERS
Angry protesters march towards the Capitol
Aggressive pro-Trump supporters rallied outside the US Capitol's Rotunda. Police tried to hold them back, but they breached security and forced their way into the building.
Image: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images
Forceful entry
An angry pro-Trump mob breaks into the US Capitol building on January 6, 2021, while Congress holds a joint session to ratify President-elect Joe Biden's Electoral College win over President Trump.
Image: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Guns drawn
With guns drawn, US Capitol police officers watch as protesters try to break into the House Chamber, the inner-most room where legislators had convened to ratify the Electoral College vote.
Image: J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo/picture alliance
Standoff outside the Senate
Security officials try to hold off the rioters in the hallway outside the Senate chamber as lawmakers on the other side of the door are rushed to safety.
Image: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo/picture alliance
Taking over the Senate
After breaking through Capitol security, a protester rushes to the middle of the Senate chamber and screams "Freedom."
Image: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Invading the Senate chamber
A rioter manages to break through security, and jumps from the public gallery to the floor of the Senate chamber.
Image: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Taking shelter
People frantically searched for shelter in the House gallery, as the protesters tried to break into the House chamber. According to a White House reporter on the House floor, people were given gas masks that were under the seats.
Image: Andrew Harnik/AP Photo/picture alliance
Protesters move in
Pro-Trump supporters took over the offices vacated by lawmakers who had been rushed to safety.
Image: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
No holding back
Without police or security officials to hold them back, protesters walzed through the Rotunda and lawmaker's offices. This one carried away the lectern of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
Image: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Tear gas against protesters
Security forces use tear gas on rioters rallying outside the US Capitol Building.
Image: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images
Chaos in the Capitol
An explosion caused by a police munition goes off while pro-Trump supporters rally in front of the US Capitol building. Washington police and the national guard have been deployed to disperse the protesters.
Image: Leah Millis/REUTERS
Dispersing protesters
Members of the National Guard and Washington DC police have been deployed to the Capitol to disperse protesters. A city-wide curfew went into effect from 6:00 pm to 6:00 am.