A recent post from Robert Reich on his blog. Please follow link to original
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http://robertreich.tumblr.com/
It’s as if they didn’t learn a thing from the
2012 elections. Republicans are on the same suicide mission as before - -
trying to block immigration reform (if they can’t scuttle it in the
Senate, they’re ready to in the House), roll back the clock on abortion
rights (they’re pushing federal and state legislation to ban abortions
after the first 22 weeks), and stop gay marriage wherever possible.
As almost everyone knows by now, this puts them the wrong side of
history. America is becoming more ethnically diverse, women are gaining
economic and political power, and young people are more socially
libertarian than ever before.
Why can’t Republicans learn?
It’s no answer to say their “base" — ever older, whiter, more rural
and male — won’t budge. The Democratic Party of the 1990s simply ignored
its old base and became New Democrats, spearheading a North American
Free Trade Act (to the chagrin of organized labor), performance
standards in classrooms (resisted by teachers’ unions) and welfare
reform and crime control (upsetting traditional liberals).
The real answer is the Republican base is far more entrenched,
institutionally, than was the old Democratic base. And its power is
concentrated in certain states — most of the old Confederacy plus
Arizona, Alaska, Indiana, and Wisconsin — which together exert more of a
choke-hold on the Republican national party machinery than the old
Democrats, spread widely but thinly over many states, exerted on the
Democratic Party.
These Republican states are more homogenous and conspicuously less
like the rest of America than the urbanized regions of the country that
are growing more rapidly. Senators and representatives from these states
naturally reflect the dominant views of their constituents — on
immigration, abortion, and gay marriage, as well as guns, marijuana,
race, and dozens of other salient issues. But these views are
increasingly out of step with where most of the nation is heading.
This state-centered, relatively homogenous GOP structure effectively
prevents the Party from changing its stripes. Despite all the
post-election rhetoric about the necessity for change emanating from GOP
leaders who aspire to the national stage, the national stage isn’t
really what the GOP is most interested in or attuned to. It’s directed
inward rather than outward, to its state constituents rather than to the
nation.
This structure also blocks any would-be “New Republicans" such as
Chris Christie from gaining the kind of power inside the party that a
New Democrat like Bill Clinton received in 1992. The only way they’d be
able to attract a following inside the Party would be to commit
themselves to policies they’d have to abandon immediately upon getting
nominated, as Mitt Romney did with disastrous results.
It’s true that by 1992 Democrats were far more desperate to win the
presidency — having been in the wilderness for twelve years — than
today’s GOP appears to be. Nonetheless it’s doubtful the GOP will be
willing to eschew its old base even if it loses the presidency again in
2016, because without its collection of relatively homogenous states,
there just isn’t much of a GOP.
The greater likelihood is a steady eclipse of the Republican Party at
the national level, even as it becomes more entrenched in particular
states. Those states can be expected to become regressive islands of
backwardness within a nation growing steadily more progressive.
The GOP’s national role will be primarily negative — seeking to
block, delay, and filibuster measures that will eventually become the
law of the land in any event, while simultaneously preaching “states’
rights" and praying for conservative majorities on the Supreme Court.
In other words, more of the same.
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