Saturday, January 30, 2021

What is the GOP Future?

The Republican Party has parted ways with facts, logic and democracy, and it’s not coming back. What happens next? Does the GOP have a future? You might think that a party that goes off the deep end morally and intellectually would also find itself going off the deep end politically. And that has in fact happened in some states. Those fantasist Oregon Republicans, who have been shut out of power since 2013, seem to be going the way of their counterparts in California, a once-mighty party reduced to impotence in the face of a Democratic supermajority.  But it’s not at all clear that this will happen at a national level. True, as Republicans have become more extreme they have lost broad support; the G.O.P. has won the popular vote for president only once since 1988, and 2004 was an outlier influenced by the lingering rally-around-the-flag effects of 9/11.  Because of the nature of our electoral system, however, Republicans can achieve power even while losing the popular vote. A majority of voters rejected Trump in 2016, but he became president anyway, and he came fairly close to pulling it out in 2020 despite a seven million vote deficit. The Senate is evenly divided even though Democratic members represent 41 million more people than Republicans.  And the Republican response to electoral defeat isn’t to change policies to win over voters; it is to try to rig the next election. Georgia has long been known for systematic suppression of Black voters; it took a remarkable organizing effort by Democrats, led by Stacey Abrams, to overcome that suppression and win the state’s electoral votes and Senate seats. So the Republicans who control the state are doubling down on disenfranchisement, with proposed new voter ID requirements and other measures to limit voting.  The bottom line is that we don’t know whether we’ve earned more than a temporary reprieve. A president who tried to retain power despite losing an election has been foiled. But a party that buys into bizarre conspiracy theories and denies the legitimacy of its opposition isn’t getting saner, and still has a good chance of taking complete power in four years.  It is up to Democrats in Congress to use every tool available to give the voting public reasons to ignore the rants and ravings of Republicans in either the House or the Senate.  Whether it is by eliminating the filibuster, reconciliation, or any other legislative means, Democrats need to forcefully prevent Republican obstruction and immediately enact the necessary legislation to deal with the pandemic, economic rescue, voting rights, immigration reform, and job-creating infrastructure needs.  To wait for any bi-partisan action on the part of Republicans is the best way to ensure the only thing the American people can look forward to is more of the same...INACTION!

 

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