Mar 07, 2013 - Issue 507 |
The Republican Party Devouring Itself - Good |
Like
revenge, schadenfreude is something to be enjoyed in
private. One does want to be careful about gloating out loud over someone
else’s misfortune, except when it comes to the crisis in the Republican Party. What’s
not to be happy about the travails of an organization that for decades has had
a “southern strategy” of taking advantage of racial intolerance? Of seeking
political advantage by demagogically targeting women and men who have crossed
the southern border seeking work? Of stirring homophobia in
an effort to divide and conquer? Yeah, I know, not all Republicans are
like that, but it’s a fair description of the party’s recent history, of the
attitudes of its “base,” and its current leadership’s strategies. Every time I
hear a GOPer talk about being in the “party of Just how
bad has it become for the party of Bush, Chaney, McCain and Palin
where, according to Politico “There is breathless talk of civil war”? “A fight
has broken out within the Republican Party,” says a recent edition of the
Economist. “On the face of it, rival camps - broadly, the establishment versus
the insurgent right - are arguing about why they lost the last election, and
how to stop losing. The loudest name-calling involves a new political fund
backed by Karl Rove, election guru to the Bush dynasty and a man with access to
deep-pocketed donors. It is one of several establishment wheezes aimed at
asserting more control over party primaries that pick candidates for big races.” That
doesn’t mean merely moving resources in the direction of those candidates the
Rove crew supports. According to the Economist’s As if that bit of inner-party fratricide weren’t enough, the Club for Growth has gotten into the battle on the other side. PrimaryMyCongressman.com, the website of the group, announced last week that “moderate” Republican politicians who don’t meet the group’s muster are going to face well-financed primary challenges in upcoming elections. The group spent over $17 million during last year’s election cycle. Which, and how many, GOP politicians are going to feel the wrath of the big business club is unclear but six incumbent members of the House of Representatives have already been cited.
“Big
government liberals inhabit the Democratic Party, but they are far too common
within the Republican Party as well,” read a statement announcing the plan. “The
Republicans helped pass billions of dollars in tax increases and they have
repeatedly voted against efforts by fiscal conservatives to limit government.
PrimaryMyCongressman.com will serve as a tool to hold opponents of economic
freedom and limited government accountable for their actions.” It’s not
easy to pin proper labels on the contending parties in the GOP inner war.
MSNBC’s Chris Matthews says it’s the “center-right” versus the “hard right.”
Sasha Chavkin in the Colombia Journalism Review describes the battle as a “confrontation
between mainstream and far right groups.” Steve LaTourette, former But
these tags often don’t mean much, or obscure what the war is all about. For
instance, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fl), the prospective Republican Presidential
candidate posited by Time magazine as
the possible “savior” of the party, is anything but a moderate. He is a climate
change skeptic opposed to government action to deal with the problem, wants
creationism to have equal standing with evolution in education, and says
homosexuality is a sin because “that’s what the Bible teaches and that’s what
faith teaches.” The rightwing Americans for Prosperity (AFP) recently released
its scorecard for the 112th Congress, ranking members of the House and Senate
according to their votes on issues over the past legislative session. Only one
senator garnered an A+, a perfect 100 percent rating: Rubio. AFP has been
called “one of the most powerful conservative organizations in electoral
politics.” All of
the warring factions in the Republican camp (there are more than two) appear to
have given up hope of making inroads into the African American community. Lest anyone
think Rove is the “moderate” under this canopy writing recently in the Wall Street Journal, he referred to
President Obama as “a once in a generation demagogue.” The more
astute observers among the contending Republican factions have come to recognize
that while African American voters continue to overwhelmingly support the
President, it’s not just because he’s black. It’s also the issues. Obviously,
past efforts to split African Americans on the basis of various social issues
have come to naught. But that hasn’t dissuaded some black conservatives and rightwingers from continuing to try; witness the unseeming recent efforts by some to convince black people
that they should oppose sensible gun control measures. Last week, rightwing
internet operative Star Parker, who claims to have a posse of black preachers
behind her, held a press conference to proclaim that “Blacks, especially, have
a stake in protecting ourselves from the government - a lesson we must share to
protect every American.” One of
Parker’s chief ministerial supporters, Dr. Ben Carson, has been added to the
featured speakers lineup for the Conservative
Political Action convention March 14-16, news that the far right Human Events
website called “exciting.” Some of
the Republicans are aware that immigration is not the only issue driving
politics in the Latino community. “It’s not irrelevant that Obamacare
is most popular with African Americans,” Stuart Stevens, lead strategist of
Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign wrote in the Washington Post February 25. “And what demographic group is the
second-most favorable to Obamacare? Hispanics.” David
Brooks, the New York Times’ resident
conservative egghead says, “Voters disdain the G.O.P. because they think
Republicans are mindless anti-government fanatics who can’t distinguish good
government programs from bad ones.” Who says
voters aren’t hip? “In retrospect, last year’s Republican primary process was entirely disconnected from the actual needs of the party,” party loyalist Michael Gerson wrote recently, “One candidate pledged to build a 20-foot-high electrical fence at the border crowned with the sign, in English and Spanish, ‘It will kill you - Warning.’ Another promised, as president, to speak out against the damage done to American society by contraception. Another warned that vaccinations may cause ‘mental retardation.’ In the course of 20 debates and in tens of millions of dollars of ads, issues such as upward mobility, education, poverty, safer communities and the environment were rarely mentioned.” In a
recent article in conservative Commentary
magazine, Gerson and co-author Peter Wehner identified the one that called for the electrified
fence: Herman “999” Cain. Their essay, Gerson said,
was an attempt to “raise ideas such as ending corporate welfare, breaking up
the mega-banks, improving the treatment of families in the tax code, and
encouraging economic mobility through education reform and improved job
training. Whatever form Republican proposals eventually take, they must move
beyond Reagan-era nostalgia.” There’s little chance of any of that happening. One of
the favorite theories of the so-called Republican reformers is that what their
party needs is what they allege “saved’ the Democratic Party and the British
Labor Party in the early 1990s. The key
to the Gerson-Wehner thesis is: “Republican primary
voters, party activists and party leaders have a choice to make, ruthlessly
clarified by recent events. They can take the path of Democrats in 1988,
doubling down on a faltering ideology. Or they can follow the model of
Democrats in 1992 and their own party in 2000, giving their nominee the leeway
needed to oppose outworn or extreme ideas and to produce an agenda relevant to
our time.” Bill
Clinton “broke a long Democratic presidential losing streak by emphasizing
middle-class values, advocating the end of ‘welfare as we know it’ and standing
up to extreme elements within his coalition (thereby creating the ‘Sister Souljah moment’). In I recall
the “Sister Souljah moment.” I was in the Writer
Michael Tomasky has a slightly different and
interesting take on all of this. Calling the Republican reformers “deluded”, he
wrote last week in the Daily Beast, “The
party they purport to support and care about has been engaged in burning down
the house of American politics for three or four years now, and they are saying
nothing about it; and until they say something a about it, everything else they
say is close to meaningless.” Tomasky went on, “God knows, policy positions are a problem. But
they are not the problem. The problem is that the party is fanatical - a
machine of rage, hate, and resentment. People are free to scoff and pretend it
isn’t so, but I don’t think honest people can deny that we’ve never seen
anything like this in the modern history of our country.” “Republican
elites are rightfully concerned with figuring out how to reform the party’s
message and appeal to new demographics - hence the growing support for
immigration reform, and the rapid elevation of Florida Senator Marco Rubio,”
wrote Tomasky. “Success for this strategy depends on
buy-in from the Republican base. But the ongoing push for right-wing
initiatives at the state-level - where ordinary voters have the most influence -
is a sign that little has changed for the rank-and-file.” “Every
smart Republican in town is saying the same thing: If they don’t expand their
party’s ranks, they don’t have a future,” wrote Hilary Rosen in the Washington Post last week. “Republican
efforts at suppressing minority voters through a myriad of state laws last
year, however, have made that mission tougher. The consequences of those
desperate maneuvers, along with the accompanying vitriolic rhetoric, are
weighing on the GOP now as its leaders make another run at rebranding a party
that needs new ideas more than it needs a new message.” Jamelle Bouie, a perceptive staff writer at The American Prospect magazine, has written, “In other words, for
the Republican base, it seems, 2012 was just a temporary setback. At this point,
base voters don’t seem to want the party to change its policies or do anything
meaningful to reach out to minorities. But there are still the realities of
demographic change, which favors the Democratic Party, and the unpopularity of
GOP ideas with growing segments of the electorate. And so the only path left is
to change the rules of the game.” Keep in
mind that this is a party that is unceasing in its efforts to dissuade or
prevent some people from going to the polls – particularly African Americans,
Latinos and students, or, if they get there, reducing the power of their vote
through various undemocratic vote counting schemes. Right now they are praying
their allies on the Supreme Court will help them out by eviscerating Federal
voting rights protection. This is more than a political maneuver; any action to
undermine the principle of “one person, one vote” is seditious. None of the above is meant as a brief for the opposition Democrats. From drone warfare abroad, to cruel mass deportations of undocumented workers, to unjustified handouts to greedy bankers, to threats to senior retirement security, many of their policies deserve nothing but resolute rejection and resistance. However, these days the major mass media is filled with commentaries about how bad the Republican Party’s divisions are for the country, how we somehow need a healthy GOP. Actually, the country doesn’t need the Republican Party at all. Its demise would be a blessing. What we need most is for the “centrist” Democrats to have an arena of their own where they can decide how much they want to deal with a rising formation of the progressive Left. That’s the reform we need right now. |
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member and Columnist Carl
Bloice is a writer in |
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