As much as it pains me to say it, it appears the Democrats are not going to have a good night on November 2nd. It pains me even more due to the influx of anger and departure of logic from the Republican Party. As things stand, the GOP look set to regain the House of Representatives and make gains in the Senate, but fall short of taking a majority there. So from January of next year we will once again have divided government in Washington, with the Republicans in charge of the House and the Democrats in charge of the Senate, and of course Barack Obama in the White House.
But this is not your father’s Republican Party. Make no mistake, the Republicans have moved considerably to the right, over the past two years especially.
There is nothing inherently bad about the GOP, or about being a Republican. This is the party that gave us Teddy Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln, however it is extremely likely that neither of these two greats, nor the conservative icon Ronald Reagan, would be as successful in today’s Republican party – Reagan raised taxes as governor of California and President, which would essentially means he would fail the litmus test of today’s rank and file members.
None of today’s big name Republicans are fit to shine the shoes of any of these three former Presidents. This is not the party of great statesmen or of big ideas, it is not the party of Lincoln or Roosevelt but of Palin and Gingrich. The intellectual power and eloquence of Bill Buckley and Irving Kristol has been replaced by the ignorance and fear mongering of Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity.
To be an intellectual in today’s Republican Party is a bad thing. Ignorance is now celebrated.
Let us look at a few recent examples. During the health care ‘debate’, conservatives told us that Obama was in the process of creating ‘death panels’ that would decide which elderly people would live or die. This was a lie based upon the idea that the Government would reimburse families for any end of life counselling they may receive for one of their loved ones. Not only is this idea harmless and good, it was in fact a Republican idea, put forward by Sen. Isaakson of Georgia.
Or when the certifiable Rep. Michelle Bachman said that, as part of a public service bill, that happened to have been co-authored by conservative Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch, President Obama would be setting up ‘camps’ similar to gulags or re-education facilities.
Newt Gingrich, he who divorced his wife whilst she was in the hospital, who is supposed to be the intellectual ideas man of the right, has said, amongst other things, that placing an Islamic community centre, which was to be run by a man who had worked for the Bush state department and had given speeches oversees on the virtues of America, three blocks from the site of ground zero, was the same as the Nazi’s placing a memorial at Auschwitz. He has also recently said that the President is channelling the Kenyan anti-colonial worldview of his dead father.
I don’t even wish to begin on the complete cartoon that is Sarah Palin. If she wasn’t taken so seriously by so many members of the public and glorified by so many in the conservative media she would finish her career as nothing but an insignificant blip. I refuse to call her Governor; after all she quit two years in to her term running Alaska to sign a book deal and star in a TV show. She has now, scarily enough, become the queen of the Tea Party movement. For some bizarre reason, there are many who feel she would be a viable challenger to Obama in 2012. Although she would have a frighteningly good chance of being the nominee, Obama would, quite simply, wipe the floor with her. Mrs Palin now spends most of her time criticising Obama for his socialism and redistributive policies (in her opinion) yet her dominion of Alaska hands out residual cheques every year to its citizens – their share of the states oil revenue. There are few people in America who need to avail themselves of a dictionary faster than Mrs Palin.
On economic issues, the Republican distaste for facts continues. In American politics, there is a distinct case for amnesia, and the GOP has used this to their advantage. After all, it was the Bush Presidency, and Republican control of congress that led to a record surplus becoming a record deficit, with tax cuts for the wealthy, two wars, and a massive prescription drug benefit all being paid for with borrowed money. Yet now the deficit appears to be the most important issue for Republicans and is a central plank of the Tea Party platform. But the Republicans now want more tax cuts for the wealthy, and refuse to pay for them. By their own words, they don’t believe tax cuts should be paid for. They want to balance the budget, but do it by not dealing with defence spending or entitlements.
Such practices by the Republicans might make for comic fodder, but it is nothing but bad for America. It has become impossible to have a debate on the issues based on reason, fact and logic. Much blame for this rests on the US media, but the behaviour of many Republican politicians is nothing short of selfish. The refusal to have such debates and unwillingness to actually solve problems, favouring instead short term political gain, will see the US continue to tread water whilst developing economies such as China, India and Brazil continue to boom. The US will be outdone in every area – including education, infrastructure, and energy.
The Republicans should have good ideas on how to solve all of the big problems that face America. Even though they despise government action, they are public servants, and at the very least need to do their jobs. The best solutions are only going to come about after debating opposing ideas. How are the Republicans preparing for power? Certainly not by espousing their own ideas to solve the big problems, instead their grand vision is simple: to stop Obama. Recently we have had leaders such as Mike Pence and John Boehner say there will be no compromise with the President and the Democrats. Mitch McMconnell has said the most important task for the Republicans will not be legislation, but making Obama a one term President. Encouraging. In a democracy, sometimes the other side wins. But problems need to be solved – this is the task of politicians. And America has an awful lot of problems right now. But for one political party to be intellectually barren and foster anger and hate instead of ideas and debate means only bad news.