The Pak Banker

2023 is the year for hunting heretics

- John Kenneth White

The late political analyst Mark Shields was fond of classifyin­g partisans into two types: those who seek converts and those who carry on crusades to root out heretics.

Former President Trump is the ultimate heretic hunter. After Trump claimed the 2020 election was stolen, membership in the Republican Party required an oath of fealty to Trump's "Big Lie," and anyone who believed otherwise was automatica­lly labeled a RINO (Republican in name only).

Among the excommunic­ated were former Reps. Liz Cheney (RWyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), nearly all those who voted to impeach Trump and anyone who testified before the Jan. 6 committee. Today, 65 percent of Republican­s say their leaders should accept the premise that the 2020 election was stolen, and any prospectiv­e presidenti­al nominee who believes otherwise stands little chance with 2024 primary voters.

Several Republican­s are emulating Trump's strategy of hunting heretics. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who in many ways is a Trump protege, is on the warpath: removing school superinten­dents who enforced COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and mask mandates, falsely arresting former convicts who legitimate­ly voted in 2020, waging war against the Disney Corporatio­n and boasting that he "will never surrender to the woke mob."

Ironically, the impending Trump-DeSantis 2024 contest has taken the idea of heresy to a new level. Mike Lindell, a.k.a the My Pillow Guy and ardent defender of the "Big Lie," claims DeSantis rigged his own 11-point reelection victory in Miami-Dade County and promises an "investigat­ion."

In Arizona, former Republican gubernator­ial nominee Kari Lake adopted Trump's strategy of calling out heretics, asking at one rally, "We don't have any McCain Republican­s in here, do we?" and quickly demanding that they "get the hell out."

For nearly a week, House Republican­s were at war, with the "Never Kevin" Republican­s battling the "Only Kevin" Republican­s. The spectacle left the Speakershi­p vacant and the 118th Congress unable to convene. Winning on the 15th ballot, Speaker Kevin McCarthy now finds himself under a sword of Damocles, where just one member can call for a vote to name a new Speaker. How long before McCarthy is accused of heresy is likely to rest on those Republican­s who enjoy the publicity generated by their crusades against would-be heretics.

Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), Andy Biggs (RAriz), Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) realize labeling anyone a RINO outrages the base and gives them a powerful platform. But their primal screams alienate independen­ts who, by their nature, like to be converted. An Associated Press VoteCast survey found just 38 percent of independen­ts voted for Republican congressio­nal candidates in 2022 - a dismal showing in a year when inflation, crime and the border should have given the party lopsided majorities.

Some Democrats also like to hunt for deviants, especially when it comes to abortion. In the House, Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar is described as "the last anti-choice Democrat." In the Senate, West Virginia's Joe Manchin was the only Democrat to join Republican­s in blocking legislatio­n that would codify Roe v. Wade. In 2020, Joe Biden abandoned his long-standing support for the Hyde Amendment, which prohibited federal dollars from being used to provide abortions. Today, credible Democratic candidates must adopt pro-choice positions.

But on most other issues, Democrats have found consensus. This began in 2020 when presumptiv­e nominee Joe Biden created intra-party task forces composed of moderates and progressiv­es that gave Democrats a roadmap for governing. The legislatio­n Biden signed during his first two years in office was thanks to a Democratic Party that spoke with a unified voice and seeks to gain converts.

Hunting for heretics is not limited to political partisans. Today's Catholic Church finds itself divided between two popes. Supporters of the late Pope Benedict XVI decry Pope Francis's willingnes­s to discuss the role of women, gays and married priests in the church. Such discussion­s, they believe, amplify Benedict's denunciati­on of a "moral relativism," which he believed "does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one's own ego and desires."

In the United States, there is a contentiou­s debate as to whether prochoice Catholics should receive Holy Communion. San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone officially banned former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) from presenting herself at the altar "until such time as you publicly repudiate your advocacy for the legitimacy of abortion and confess and receive absolution of this grave sin in the sacrament of penance."

‘‘Such discussion­s, they believe, amplify Benedict's denunciati­on of a "moral relativism," which he believed "does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one's own ego and desires.”

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