Election 2016 seems to have not only not been the end of the Republican Party, but it might have actually sparked a Republican renaissance when our country needs it the most. Through the transition and early in Trump’s first year as president, Republicans will need to reconcile what he said during the campaign with what he can actually do, not to mention with the priorities of the congressional leadership, and that won’t necessarily be easy. But even in the hours after the unexpected wins Tuesday night, as the shock fades, I can report that Republicans are elated and falling in line. The process of “coming home” has rapidly accelerated. And, with the opposition chastened and lacking credibility and the media dumbfounded and flat-footed, it could be that although Trump’s negatives earlier this week were almost 59 percent, he may be about to experience something of a honeymoon.