The GOP DOES still have ideas – bad ones that are extremely dangerous ones
These are powerful and dangerous ideas, even if they do not
constitute a coherent policy agenda.
Noah writes that the party’s “failure to produce a party platform in 2020 proved beyond a doubt that there was no such thing as a GOP ideology.” I get what he is saying; that 2020 Republican not-platform was surely a sign of something troubling. But Noah’s account is not quite right.
The RNC’s one-page announcement in the summer of 2020 declared that the
Convention “would adjourn without adopting a new platform”
until 2024 (emphasis added.) This announcement was immediately preceded by this
Resolution: “That the Republican Party has and will continue to
enthusiastically support the President’s America-first agenda.”
In short, the GOP in 2020 registered its continued adherence to
its 2016 platform and, more important, announced its unqualified and total
support for the agenda, the rhetoric, and the performance of Donald Trump, this
after numerous scandals, the Mueller Report, and an impeachment.
There is a term for this: The Leader Principle (in German, more ominously, Fuhrerprinzip). It played an important role in the history of fascism. As Noah well knows, for years now a serious debate has raged among scholars and public intellectuals about the extent to which Trumpism has fascist dimensions.
The semantic debate about “fascism” will
surely continue. But what is really beyond debate is that the GOP has become
deeply hostile to liberal democracy, and its principal leaders and ideologues
have quite explicitly lauded the xenophobic, nationalistic, and anti-liberal
regime of Hungary’s Viktor Orban.
It is not only that prominent Republican officials and MAGA media personalities like Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, and Steve Bannon embrace Orban. A substantial network of right-wing academic institutions actively and relentlessly promote Orban’s dark vision.
These
include the Claremont Institute and its publications, The Claremont
Review of Books and The American Mind; venues such
as American Affairs, American Greatness, and Law
& Liberty; and Hillsdale College–the principal source of Trump’s
infamous “1776 Commission”–which Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is currently
vaunting as the model for the restructuring of higher education in his state
(and is surely a demonstration project for a DeSantis presidency).
The purveyors of these ideas have willingly and cynically made
common cause with Q-anon conspiracists, Second Amendment fanatics, “Left
Behind” preppers, and neo-Nazis. And in doing so they have helped to transform
the GOP from a more or less free market conservative party to a radical conservative
party—an extremist party—intent on eradicating
“progressivism,” “socialism,” “wokeism,” and all forms of liberalism.
The GOP might be confused about what it is for. But it is
crystal clear about what it is against.
And while the nasty skirmish about Kevin McCarthy’s House
Speakership might have centered on “egos and power rivalries,” it is a fact
that McCarthy, Elise Stefaniak, Steve Scalise and their attack dog Marjorie
Taylor Greene in short order came together with Matt Gaetz, Lauren Boebert, Paul
Gosar—all of whom voted to undo Joe Biden’s election as president—to commit
themselves to a culture war against the left and indeed against cultural
modernity itself.
Today’s GOP contains idiots and nihilists and pathological liars
like George Santos. It contains sheer opportunists such as Mitch McConnell and
even McCarthy himself. And since 2016, it has been dominated by a group of
right-wing ideologues, inside and outside of government, who have fueled and
been fueled by Trump and who are emphatically committed to a reactionary
nationalist, racist, and authoritarian vision of “American Greatness.” Whether
this vision is carried forward by Trump, or DeSantis, is for them quite beside
the point. For that is the GOP vision.
I am quite willing to agree with Timothy Noah that in a conventional, colloquial sense these people have “lost their minds.” They surely inhabit a strange intellectual and moral universe of their own deluded contrivance. But they are not without ideas. They are fanatics, in possession of and possessed by very dangerous ideas.
These ideas helped to promote an insurrection. They continue to sustain lies
about the legitimacy of the Biden administration and to justify efforts to
undermine democratic procedures, voting rights, and racial and gender equality.
And they are currently being instrumentalized to reshape K-12 education and
higher education in the U.S.
These ideas are very dangerous. And in order
to defeat them we need to treat them with the seriousness they deserve.