Once the party of small government, the new GOP wants to impose Christian nationalism on the country
ROBERT REICH in Robertreich.Substack.Com
As House Republicans are convulsing over electing their next Speaker, the civil war in the Republican Party comes into the open. But it’s not particularly civil and it’s not exactly a war. It’s the mindless hostility of a political party that’s lost any legitimate reason for being.
For all practical purposes, the Republican Party is over.
A half century ago, the Republican Party stood for limited
government. Its position was not always coherent or logical (it
overlooked corporate power and resisted civil rights), but at least had a
certain consistency: the GOP could always be relied on to seek lower taxes and
oppose Democratic attempts to enlarge the scope of the federal power.
This was, and still is, the position of the establishment Republican Party of the two George Bush’s, of its wealthy libertarian funders, and of its Davos-jetting corporate executive donor base. But it has little to do with the real GOP of today.
In the 1990s, Newt Gingrich and Fox News’s Roger Ailes ushered the Republican Party into cultural conservatism -- against abortion, contraception, immigration, voting rights, gay marriage, LBGTQ rights, and, eventually, against teaching America’s history of racism, trans-gender rights, and, during the pandemic, even against masks.
At the same time, the GOP
was for police cracking down on crime (especially committed by
Black people), teaching religion with public money, for retailers
discriminating against LBGTQ people, and for immigration authorities hunting
down and deporting undocumented residents.
Gingrich and Ailes smelled the redolent possibilities of cultural conservatism, sensed the power of evangelicals and the anger of rural white America, saw votes in a Republican base that hewed to “traditional values” and, of course, racism.
But this cultural conservatism was so inconsistent with limited
government – in effect, calling on government to intrude in the some of the
most intimate aspects of personal life – that the Party line became confused,
its message garbled, its purpose unclear. It thereby opened itself to a third
and far angrier phase, centering on resentment and authoritarianism.
The foundation for this third phase had been laid for decades as
white Americans without college degrees, mostly hourly-wage workers,
experienced a steady drop in income and security. Not only had upward mobility
been blocked, but about half their children wouldn’t live as well as they
lived. The middle class was shrinking. Good-paying union jobs were
disappearing.
Enter Donald Trump, the con-artist with a monstrous talent for
exploiting resentment in service of his ego. Trump turned the Republican Party
into a white working-class cauldron of bitterness, xenophobia, racism, anti-intellectualism,
and anti-science paranoia, while turning himself into the leader of a near
religious cult bent on destroying anything in his way – including American
democracy.
A political party is nothing more than a shell – fundraising
machinery, state and local apparatus, and elected officials, along with a
dedicated base of volunteers and activists. That base gives fuels a party,
giving it purpose and meaning.
Today’s Republican base is fueling hate. It is the epicenter of
an emerging anti-democracy movement.
The Republican Party will continue in some form. It takes more
than nihilistic mindlessness to destroy a party in a winner-take-all system
such as we have in the United States.
But the Republican Party in this third phase no longer has a
legitimate role to play in our system of self-government. It is over.
What we are seeing played out today in the contest for the speakership of the Republican House involves all of these pieces – small-government establishment, cultural warrior, and hate-filled authoritarian – engaged in hopeless, hapless combat with each other, and with the aspirations and ideals of the rest of America.
Robert Reich, is the Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and a senior fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He served as secretary of labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. His book include: "Aftershock" (2011), "The Work of Nations" (1992), "Beyond Outrage" (2012) and, "Saving Capitalism" (2016). He is also a founding editor of The American Prospect magazine, former chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary, "Inequality For All." Reich's newest book is "The Common Good" (2019). He's co-creator of the Netflix original documentary "Saving Capitalism," which is streaming now.