The Republican
Party is Over
|
WASHINGTON (By Michael Grunwald, Time) May. 07, 2009 These days, Republicans have the desperate aura of an endangered species. They lost Congress, then the White House; more recently, they lost a slam-dunk House election in a conservative New York district, then Senator Arlen Specter. Polls suggest only one-fourth of the electorate considers itself Republican, independents are trending Democratic and as few as five states have solid Republican pluralities. And the electorate is getting less white, less rural, less Christian in short, less demographically Republican. GOP officials who completely controlled Washington three years ago are vowing to "regain our status as a national party" and creating woe-is-us groups to resuscitate their brand, while Democrats are publishing books like The Strange Death of Republican America and 40 More Years: How the Democrats Will Rule the Next Generation. John McCain's campaign manager recently described his party as basically extinct on the West Coast, nearly extinct in the Northeast and endangered in the Mountain West and Southwest.
So are the Republicans going extinct? And can the death march be stopped? The Washington critiques of the Republican Party as powerless, leaderless and rudderless the new Donner party are not very illuminating. Minority parties always look weak and inept in the penalty box. Sure, it can be comical to watch Republican National Committee (RNC) gaffe machine Michael Steele riff on his hip-hop vision for the party or Texas Governor Rick Perry carry on about secession or Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann explain how F.D.R.'s "Hoot-Smalley" Act caused the Depression (the Smoot-Hawley Act, a Republican tariff bill, was enacted before F.D.R.'s presidency), but haplessness does not equal hopelessness. And yes, the Republican brand could benefit from spokesmen less familiar and less reviled than Karl Rove, Dick Cheney and Newt Gingrich, but the party does have some fresher faces stepping out of the wings.
The Democratic critiques of the GOP that it's the Party of No, or No Ideas are not helpful either. It's silly to fault an opposition party for opposition; obstructionism helped return Democrats to power. Republicans actually have plenty of ideas.
That's the problem. The party's ideas about economic issues, social issues and just about everything else are not popular ideas. They are extremely conservative ideas tarred by association with the extremely unpopular George W. Bush, who helped downsize the party to its extremely conservative base. A hard-right agenda of slashing taxes for the investor class, protecting marriage from gays, blocking universal health insurance and extolling the glories of water boarding produces terrific ratings for Rush Limbaugh, but it's not a majority agenda. The party's new, Hooverish focus on austerity on the brink of another depression does not seem to fit the national mood, and it's shamelessly hypocritical, given the party's recent history of massive deficit spending on pork, war and prescription drugs in good times, not to mention its continuing support for deficit-exploding tax cuts in bad times.
As the party has shrunk to its base, it has catered even more to its base's biases, insisting that the New Deal made the Depression worse, carbon emissions are fine for the environment and tax cuts actually boost revenues even though the vast majority of historians, scientists and economists disagree. The RNC is about to vote on a kindergartenish resolution to change the name of its opponent to the Democrat Socialist Party. This plays well with hard-core culture warriors and tea-party activists convinced a dictator-President is plotting to seize their guns, choose their doctors and put ACORN in charge of the Census, but it ultimately produces even more shrinkage, which gives the base even more influence and the death spiral continues. "We're excluding the young, minorities, environmentalists, pro-choice the list goes on," says Olympia Snowe of Maine, one of two moderate Republicans left in the Senate after Specter's switch. "Ideological purity is not the ticket to the promised land."
Some conservatives think in the long run, the party will be better off without squishes like Specter muddling the coherence of its brand; a GOP campaign committee celebrated his departure with an e-mail headlined "Good riddance," and Limbaugh urged him to take McCain along. Inside this echo chamber, a center-right nation punished Republicans for abandoning their principles, for enabling Bush's spending sprees, for insufficient conservatism. South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who has refused to accept $700 million in stimulus cash for his state despite bitter opposition from his GOP-dominated legislature, argues Chick-fil-A would never let its franchisees cook their chicken however they want; why should the Republican Party let its elected officials promote Big Government? "We're essentially franchisees, and right now nobody has any clue what we're really about," Sanford tells TIME. "You can't wear the jersey and play for the other team!"
No one seems to deny many Republicans abandoned their principles especially fiscal responsibility while in power, but even some across-the-board conservatives see enforced homogeneity as a sure path to oblivion. "Chick-fil-A can get fabulously wealthy with a 20% market share," scoffs Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, President Ronald Reagan's political director. "In our business, you need 50% plus one." It's probably true that since 200,000 Pennsylvania Republicans have switched parties, Specter followed them to save his own political skin, but it's hard to see how the mass exodus bodes well for the GOP. You can't have a center-right coalition when you've said good riddance to the center.
Of course, politics can change in a hurry. Three years ago, books like One Party Country and Building Red America were heralding Rove's plan to create a permanent Republican majority. President Barack Obama is popular today, but Democrats in general are not, and they will all face a backlash if they can't reverse this economic tailspin now that they own all the Washington machinery. Tom Cole, a longtime Republican operative turned Oklahoma Congressman, recalls that shortly before the Reagan Revolution, the GOP was in such dire straits, it ran ads declaring that Republicans are people too. "We've lost our way, but we'll find our way back," Cole says. "We'll get back into the idea business, and the Democrats will overreach."
With his dramatic plans to restructure Wall Street and Detroit, overhaul health care and create a clean-energy economy, Obama is certainly taking political risks, even if he hasn't gotten around to replacing the almighty dollar with some new, one-world currency the black-helicopter crowd keeps warning about. But it's not clear that the Republicans in their current incarnation would be a credible alternative if he falters. "We've got to be at least plausible, and I worry about that," says GOP lobbyist Ed Rogers. Republicans never really left the idea business, but Americans haven't been buying what they're selling, and their product line hasn't changed. They're starting to look like the Federalists of the early 19th century: an embittered, over-the-top, out-of-touch regional party en route to extinction, doubling down on dogma the electorate has already rejected. Our two-party system encourages periodic pendulum swings, but given current trends, it's easy to imagine a third party in the U.S.
At this rate, it could be the Republican Party.
"What Have We Got to Lose?"
House Republicans, eager to
shed the Party of No label,
recently unveiled an
alternative to Obama's 2010
budget. It was the kind of
fiasco that shows why
Washington thinks
Republicans are in trouble
and why they really are in
trouble.
The disaster began when GOP
leaders, after calling a
news conference to blast
Obama's numbers, released a
budget outline with no
numbers just magic
assumptions about "reform."
The mockery was
instantaneous. Then
Republicans began blaming
one another for the stunt,
which generated only more
mockery about circular
firing squads. And when they
finally released the missing
details on April 1, the
notion of an April Fools'
budget produced even more
mockery; the substance was
ignored. "The President's
dog got more attention,"
recalls Paul Ryan, the top
Republican on the House
Budget Committee.
But if you pay attention,
the GOP alternative is not
just a p.r. disaster. It's a
radical document, making
Bush's tax cuts permanent
while adding about $3
trillion in new tax cuts
skewed toward the rich. It
would replace almost all the
stimulus including tax
cuts for workers as well as
spending on schools,
infrastructure and clean
energy with a capital
gainstax holiday for
investors. Oh, and it would
shrink the budget by
replacing Medicare with
vouchers, turning Medicaid
into block grants,
means-testing Social
Security and freezing
everything else except
defense and veterans'
spending for five years,
putting programs for food
safety, financial
regulation, flu vaccines and
every other sacred
government cow on the
potential chopping block.
Ryan is one of the smart,
young, telegenic policy
wonks who have been hailed
as the GOP's future, and his
budget includes relatively
few the-Lord-shall-provide
accounting gimmicks by D.C.
standards. He knows its
potential cuts could sound
nasty in a 30-second ad, but
he wants Republicans to stop
running away from
limited-government
principles. "We've got to
stop being afraid of the
politics," he says. "At this
point, what have we got to
lose?"
Well, more elections. Big
Government is never popular
in theory, but the disaster
aid, school lunches and
prescription drugs that make
up Big Government have
become wildly popular in
practice, especially now
that so many people are
hurting. Samuel Wurzelbacher,
better known as Joe the
Plumber, tells TIME he's so
outraged by GOP
overspending, he's quitting
the party and he's the
bull's-eye of its target
audience. But he also said
he wouldn't support any cuts
in defense, Social Security,
Medicare or Medicaid
which, along with debt
payments, would put more
than two-thirds of the
budget off limits. It's no
coincidence that many
Republicans who voted
against the stimulus have
claimed credit for stimulus
projects in their district
or that Louisiana Governor
Bobby Jindal stopped
ridiculing
volcano-monitoring programs
after a volcano erupted in
Alaska. "We can't be the
anti-government party,"
Snowe says. "That's not what
people want."
Not even in South Carolina,
not now. Sanford has gone
further than any other
governor in passing up the
Democrats' stimulus money,
but he's turning down only
10% of his state's share,
about 2% of his state's
spending. He is still being
portrayed as Scrooge, a
heartless ideologue who
wants to close prisons, fire
teachers, shutter programs
for autistic kids and
ultimately shut down state
government during a
recession. And those
portrayals aren't coming
from Democrats. "The
governor has one of the most
radical philosophies I've
ever seen," says state
senator Hugh Leatherman, 78,
the Republican chairman of
the finance committee. "I'm
a conservative, but this
could be the most
devastating thing our state
has ever seen." To Sanford,
Leatherman is a fraudulent
Republican franchisee, but
to most Republicans in the
legislature, the governor is
the one tarnishing the
brand. "Most of us are
Ronald Reagan Republicans,
Strom Thurmond Republicans,"
grumbles Senate majority
leader Harvey Peeler.
"Republicans control
everything around here. It
would be nice if we could
accomplish something."
Sanford was once a lonely
voice for fiscal restraint
in Congress, one of the few
Republican revolutionaries
of 1994 who kept faith with
the Contract with America.
Back then, his bumper
stickers said "Deficit" with
a Ghostbusters-style slash
through it, and his
apocalyptic speeches
chronicled how debt had
destroyed great
civilizations like the
Byzantine Empire. I watched
him give an updated version
at a tea-party rally in
Columbia, S.C., on April 15
as the crowd screamed about
Obama's tyranny and waved
signs like "Keep the
Government Out of Our Health
Care" and "USA 1776-2009,
RIP." Sanford himself is not
a screamer; he's a
provocateur. "We've become a
party of pastry chefs,
telling people they can eat
all the dessert they want,"
he says. "We need to become
a party of country doctors,
telling people that this
medicine won't taste good at
all, but you need it."
It's principled leadership,
but only the tea-party
fringe seems to be
following. "Nobody likes Dr.
Doom," Sanford says with a
smile. Leading a state with
the nation's third highest
unemployment rate, he
understands the Keynesian
idea that only government
spending can jump-start a
recessionary economy: "I get
it. I'm supposed to be
proactive." But if
spend-and-borrow is the only
alternative to a depression,
he says, "then we're toast."
The Old Issue Set
His party could be too.
Hispanics, Asians and blacks
are on track to be the
majority in three decades;
metropolitan voters and
young voters who skew
Democratic are also on the
rise. This is why Rogers
recently decided to quit
being a talking head: "I had
a meeting with myself, and I
said, Do we really need more
white lobbyists with gray
hair on TV?" But it's not
clear that more diverse
spokesmen or better tweets
can woo a new generation to
the GOP; support for gay
rights is soaring, and polls
show that voters prefer
Democratic approaches to
health care, education and
the economy. "The outlook
for Republicans is even
worse than people think,"
says Ruy Teixeira, author of
The Emerging Democratic
Majority. "Their biggest
problem is that they really
believe what they believe."
So Republicans need to
decide what Republicans need
to believe. What does their
three-legged stool of strong
defense, traditional values
and economic conservatism
mean today? Does strong
defense mean unqualified
support for torture,
outdated weapons systems and
pre-emptive wars? Do
traditional values mean no
room in the tent for pro-choicers
like Specter and Snowe? Even
Joe the Plumber who
opposes abortion and
homosexuality and considers
America a "Christian nation"
wants the party to drop
its "holier than thou"
attitude on divisive social
issues.
The most urgent question is
the meaning of economic
conservatism. Representative
Patrick McHenry of North
Carolina, a conservative who
keeps a bust of Reagan on
his desk, surprised me by
declaring that the Reagan
era is over. "Marginal tax
rates are the lowest they've
been in generations, and all
we can talk about is tax
cuts," he said. "The
people's desires have
changed, but we're still
stuck in our old issue set."
Snowe recalls that when she
proposed fiscally
conservative "triggers" to
limit Bush's tax cuts in
case of deficits, she was
attacked by fellow
Republicans. "I don't know
when willy-nilly tax cuts
became the essence of who we
are," she says. "To the
average American who's
struggling, we're in some
other stratosphere. We're
the party of Big Business
and Big Oil and the rich."
In the Bush era, the party
routinely sided with
corporate lobbyists
promoting tax breaks,
subsidies and earmarks for
well-wired industries
against ordinary taxpayers
as well as basic principles
of fiscal restraint. South
Carolina Senator Jim
DeMint's Republican
alternative to the stimulus
included tax cuts skewed
toward the wealthy; at this
point, the GOP's reflexes
are almost involuntary.
Now that they've lost their
monopoly on power, many
Republicans are warning
spending-fueled deficits
will cause inflation, reduce
demand for U.S. Treasuries
and shaft future
generations. They don't seem
so worried about an imminent
depression, which would
explode deficits in addition
to the shorter-term pain,
and their newfound fear of
borrowing has not cooled
their ardor for
budget-busting tax cuts.
"They talk about fiscal
restraint, but they've got
an atrocious record, and
they've still got atrocious
plans," says Robert Bixby,
executive director of the
nonpartisan Concord
Coalition.
Still, a 2012 presidential
candidate could catch
lightning in a bottle,
Reagan-style or Susan
Boylestyle although when
you think about it,
Republicans found a
nationally admired war hero
with proven bipartisan
appeal in 2008, and he lost
to an inexperienced black
liberal with a funny name.
Outside Washington,
moderates like Charlie Crist
in Florida and Jodi Rell in
Connecticut as well as
pragmatic conservatives like
Mitch Daniels in Indiana and
Jon Huntsman in Utah have
remained popular despite
their brand. They all share
an aversion to ideological
rigidity: Rell signed a bill
legalizing same-sex unions,
Crist has pushed an
ambitious environmental
agenda, Daniels proposed a
tax increase, and Huntsman
has cautioned Republicans
not to obsess about social
issues.
There's always the chance
that some new issue
immigration? Iran? cap and
trade? something nobody has
thought of yet? will blow
up and bring the GOP back to
life. Maybe one of the new
GOP chin-stroking groups
will come up with some
killer new ideas to help the
party reconnect with
ordinary Americans. But
Republicans know their best
hope for recovery, whether
they say it like Limbaugh or
merely think it, is
Democratic failure. Now that
Democrats control both
Congress and the White
House, hubris is a real
possibility; it's hard to
imagine Obama floating his
pitiful plan to cut $100
million in waste a mere
0.0025% of federal spending
if he had to worry about a
formidable opposition.
The problem for Republicans,
as the RNC's Steele
memorably put it in a TV
appearance, is that there's
"absolutely no reason, none,
to trust our word or our
actions." Republicans, after
all, proclaimed that
President Clinton's tax
hikes would destroy the
economy, that GOP rule would
mean smaller government,
that Bush's tax cuts would
usher in a new era of
prosperity; now the House
minority leader says it's
"comical" to think carbon
dioxide could be harmful,
and Steele says the earth is
cooling.
Polls show most
Republicans who haven't
jumped ship want the party
to move even further right;
it takes vision to imagine a
presidential candidate with
national appeal emerging
from a GOP primary in 2012.
DeMint, the South Carolina
Senator, greeted Specter's
departure with the
astonishing observation
he'd rather have 30
Republican colleagues who
believe in conservatism than
60 who don't. "I don't want
us to have power until we
have principles," DeMint
told TIME after firing up
that tea-party crowd in
Columbia. Voters certainly
soured on unprincipled
Republicans. But it's not
clear they'd like principled
Republicans better.
