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Donald Trump debate snub: Is he bigger than GOP now?

Experts keep waiting for the Republican Party to stop Donald Trump's rise. But the Fox News debate snub suggests that maybe there's nothing it can do.

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John Minchillo/AP/File
Donald Trump (l.) isn鈥檛 backing down from his threat to boycott Thursday night鈥檚 GOP debate over his feud with Fox News Channel host and moderator Megyn Kelly (r.).

Does Donald Trump鈥檚 withdrawal from the Fox News debate indicate that the Republican Party coalition is sputtering, like an old car driven hard for too many miles?

Or does it just show that The Donald is a singular political force that can鈥檛 be contained?

At time of writing, Mr. Trump was still refusing to appear at Thursday鈥檚 Fox showdown due to what he claims is moderator Megyn Kelly鈥檚 bias against him. This Trump-generated feud may be a good tactical decision for him, writes the Monitor鈥檚 Husna Haq: He gets to avoid tough questions while remaining the center of the story.

For its part, Fox News may suffer a ratings loss without the 鈥淐elebrity Apprentice鈥 star at the central podium.

But it鈥檚 possible the real loser here in an institutional sense might be the GOP.

That鈥檚 because Fox News, an unabashed right-leaning media outfit, is part of the larger, loose coalition of party officials, interest groups, consultants, and media figures that makes up the Republican Party as a whole.

Trump was already at odds with The National Review, a small but influential conservative magazine that鈥檚 published an entire anti-Trump issue. Now he鈥檚 also fighting Fox 鈥 a much larger and more influential party actor.

Friction between candidates and conservative media outlets is fairly common, especially in presidential primary season. Fox has even taken heat from some conservatives who deem the network too reliant on figures from the eras of the Bush presidencies for its on-air talent.

鈥淓ven still, this sort of sustained, all-out conflict between two of the right鈥檚 leading media outlets and the GOP鈥檚 presidential frontrunner is virtually unprecedented. Among other things, it suggests that the traditional party power structures are breaking down, and are now competing amongst each other to retain their dominance,鈥 at the libertarian publication Reason.

Many pundits and political scientists have expected that at some point the professional factions within the GOP 鈥 politicians, former politicians, Washington lobbyists, and so forth that make up the 鈥渆stablishment鈥 鈥 would rally around a preferred alternative to outsiders Trump and Ted Cruz.

So far that hasn鈥檛 happened. Perhaps the party is deciding to not decide.

But Trump鈥檚 continued success in the polls challenges the very notion that a loose network of party figures can exert control on the nomination process. Perhaps the power of these players to winnow out presidential hopefuls they feel would be bad for the party鈥檚 image (and down-ballot candidates) just isn鈥檛 that extensive.

Trump鈥檚 nose-thumbing at Fox may exemplify this. Here are his possible thoughts: Why do I need another debate appearance where they鈥檒l just attack me? I鈥檓 yuuugeee in Iowa, just look at the polls. They need me more than I need them.

鈥淔ox News and National Review may play critical roles in disseminating conservative ideas and promoting conservative causes. But they don鈥檛 seem to be very effective in winnowing out a candidate who can generate plenty of media coverage on his own,鈥 , an associate professor of political science at Marquette University, on the data journalism site FiveThirtyEight.

It鈥檚 possible that the party establishment, which rallied around George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney has lost its mojo, and Trump is taking advantage of that. It鈥檚 also possible there was little mojo in the first place.聽

鈥淚f parties really operate without much hierarchy or many formal rules, then we shouldn鈥檛 be surprised that they are highly susceptible, under the right circumstances, to hostile takeovers by outsider candidates,鈥 Ms. Azari concludes.

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