Albany Times Union

Where does the GOP go from here?

- DAVID BROOKS

Jonathan V. Last thinks President Donald Trump is here forever. Last, the editor of The Bulwark, a conservati­ve site that’s been hostile to Trump, argues that if Trump loses in November, he’ll claim he was cheated out of the election. He’ll force other Republican­s to back up his claim. He’ll get a TV show, hold rallies, be coy about running again in 2024.

He’ll still be the center of everything Republican. Ambitious Republican­s will have to lash themselves to the husk of the dying czar if they want to have any future in the party. The whole party will go Trump-crazed and brain-dead for another four years.

I salute Last for coming up with a post2020 scenario even more pessimisti­c than my own!

My guess is that if Trump gets crushed in the election, millions of Republican­s will decide they never liked that loser and jerk anyway. He’ll get relegated to whatever bargain basement they are using to hold Sarah Palin. But something will remain: Trumpism.

The basic Trump worldview — on immigratio­n, trade, foreign policy, etc. — will shape the GOP for decades, the way the basic Reagan worldview did for decades. I think Trumpism will survive Trump because the history of the modern Republican Party is the history of paradigm shifts.

If you came of age with conservati­ve values and around Republican politics in the 1980s and 1990s, you lived within a certain Ronald Reagan-margaret Thatcher paradigm. It was about limiting government, spreading democracy abroad, building dynamic free markets at home and cultivatin­g people with vigorous virtues — people who are energetic, upright, entreprene­urial, independen­t-minded, loyal to friends and strong against foes.

For decades conservati­ves were happy to live in that paradigm. But as years went by many came to see its limits. It was so comprehens­ively anti-government that it had no way to use government to solve common problems. It was so focused on cultivatin­g strong individual­s that it had no language to cultivate a sense of community and belonging. So, if you were right of center, you leapt. You broke from the Reagan paradigm and tried to create a new, updated conservati­ve paradigm.

My own leap came early. On Sept. 15, 1997, William Kristol and I wrote a piece for The Wall Street Journal on what we called National Greatness Conservati­sm. We argued that the GOP had become too anti-government. “How can Americans

love their nation if they hate its government?” we asked. Only a return to the robust American nationalis­m of Alexander Hamilton, Henry Clay and Theodore Roosevelt would do: ambitious national projects, infrastruc­ture, federal programs to increase social mobility.

The closest National Greatness Conservati­sm came to inf luencing the party was John Mccain’s 2000 presidenti­al bid. He was defeated by a man, George W. Bush, who made his own leap, to compassion­ate conservati­sm, an attempt to meld Catholic social teaching to conservati­sm.

There were many other leaps over the decades. Sam’s Club Republican­s, led by Reihan Salam and my Times colleague Ross Douthat, pointed a way to link the GOP to workingcla­ss concerns. Front Porch Republican­s celebrated small towns and local communitie­s. Most actual Republican politician­s rejected all of this. They stuck, mostly through dumb inertia, to an anti-government zombie Reaganism long after Reagan was dead and even though the nation’s problems were utterly different from what they were when he was alive. Year after year, GOP politician­s ran the same anti-washington campaigns and had no positive governing philosophy once they got there.

Steve Bannon’s leap finally did what none of us could do. Donald Trump and Bannon took a low-rent strand of conservati­sm — class-based ethnic nationalis­m — that had always been locked away in the basement of the American right and overturned the Reagan paradigm.

During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Trump and Bannon discarded the Republican orthodoxy — entitlemen­t reform, fiscal restraint, free trade, comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. They embraced a European-style blood-andsoil conservati­sm. Close off immigratio­n. Close trade. We have nothing to offer the world and should protect ourselves from its dangers.

It would have been interestin­g if Trump had governed as a big-government populist. But he tossed Bannon out and handed power to Jared Kushner and a bunch of old men locked in the Reagan paradigm. We got bigotry, incompeten­ce and tax cuts for the wealthy.

But by defeating the Reagan paradigm, Trump and Bannon gave permission to a lot of Republican politician­s to make their own leaps. Over the past three years, it’s been interestin­g to watch a series of Republican officehold­ers break free from old orthodoxie­s and begin to think afresh. Their newfound liberation didn’t extend to crossing Trump, but because the president’s political vision isn’t exactly what you’d call fleshed out, there’s a lot of running room within his paradigm.

The post-2020, posttrump Republican future is contained in those leaps. And that future is embodied by a small group of Republican senators in their 40s, including Marco Rubio, Josh Hawley, Tom Cotton and Ben Sasse. They all came of age when Reaganism was already in the rearview mirror. Though populist, three of them have advanced degrees from Harvard or Yale. They are not particular­ly close to one another. They may be joined by a common experience, but they are divided by ambition.

Each has a different vision of where the country should go, but they start with certain common Trumpian premises:

Everything is not OK. The free market is not working well. Wages are stagnant. Too much power is in the hands of the corporate elites. Middle America is getting screwed. Finance capitalism is unbalanced. American society is in abject decline.

Economic libertaria­nism is not the answer. Free markets alone won’t solve our problems. GDP growth alone is not the be-all and end-all of politics. We need policies to shore up the conservati­ve units of society — family, neighborho­od, faith, nation. We need policies that build solidarity, not just liberty.

The working class is the heart of the Republican Party. Once, businesspe­ople and entreprene­urs were at the center of the Republican imaginatio­n. Now it’s clear that the party needs to stop catering to the corporate class and start focusing on the shop owners, the plumbers, the salaried workers. It needs to emphasize the dignity of work and honor those who are not trying to make millions, not looking for handouts, but just want to build middle-class lives in a stable social order.

China changes everything. Theriseofa 1.4-billion-person authoritar­ian superpower means that free trade no longer works because the Chinese are not playing by the same rules. The U.S. government cannot just stand back and let China control the new technologi­es.

The managerial class betrays America. Many of the post-reagan positions seem like steps to the left. But these Republican­s combine a greater willingnes­s to use government with a greater hostility to the managerial class. The solution to too much corporate power is not handing power to Elizabeth Warren and a cloud of federal regulators. There’s a difference between empowering workers and empowering the Washington elite.

From these common premises the four senators go off in different directions.

Rubio bases his vision in Catholic social teaching. A year ago, he wrote an essay for First Things titled, “What Economics Is For,” arguing that the purpose of markets is not growth but allowing each person to find dignity in work. He followed that up with a speech at Catholic University calling for “commongood capitalism” in which he criticized contempora­ry capitalism for its obsessive focus on maximizing shareholde­r value.

His basic position is that American capitalism has become too much about finance. It needs to be balanced toward manufactur­ing.

Hawley is the most populist of the group. His core belief is that middleclas­s Americans have been betrayed by elites on every level — political elites, cultural elites, financial elites. The modern leadership class has one set of values — globalizat­ion, cosmopolit­anism — and the Middle Americans have another set — family, home, rootedness, nation. Corporate elites have concentrat­ed so much power that they now crush the yeomen masses.

Last November, Hawley gave a speech in which he sought to overturn the past 70 years of Republican foreign policy. He contended that the right had erred in trying to spread American values abroad. “Imperial domination violates our principles and it threatens our character. Our aim must be to prevent imperialis­m, not to exercise it; to stop domination, not foster it,” he said.

Cotton has a less developed political vision but a more developed attitude: hawkishnes­s. Whether it’s China, the left, immigratio­n or Big Tech, he sees a world threatened by disorder and gravitates toward the toughest positions in order to ward off threat.

Sasse is the most sociologic­al of the crew. He is a Tocquevill­ian localist, who notes that most normal Americans go days without thinking of national politics. His vision is centered on the small associatio­ns — neighborho­od groups, high school football teams, churches and community centers — where people find their greatest joys, satisfacti­ons and supports. Government’s job, he says, is to “create a framework of ordered liberty” so that people can make their family and neighborho­od the center of their lives.

He is the most suspicious of government and politics today. “I think politician­s are arsonists,” he told me over the phone last month. “The main thing the GOP does is try to light the Democrats on fire, and the main thing the Democrats do is light the Republican­s on fire. That’s why there’s so little trust in politics.”

The Republican Party looks completely braindead at every spot Trump directly reaches. Off in the corners, though, there’s a lot of intellectu­al ferment on the right. But if there is one thing I’ve learned over the decades, it is never to underestim­ate the staying power of the dead Reagan paradigm. The Wall Street Journal editorial page stands as a vigilant guardian of the corpse. Nikki Haley, the former U.N. ambassador, and Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia are staunch defenders of minimalgov­ernment conservati­sm. Sen. Ted Cruz seems to be positionin­g himself for a 2024 presidenti­al run that seeks to triangulat­e all the pre-trump and pro-trump versions of the party.

And if Joe Biden defeats Trump and begins legislatin­g, as seems more and more likely, there’s also the possibilit­y that Republican­s will abandon any positive vision and revert to being a simple anti-government party — a party of opposition to whatever Biden is doing.

But over the long term, some version of workingcla­ss Republican­ism will redefine the GOP. When push comes to shove, Republican politician­s are going to choose their voters over their donor class.

The working-class emphasis is the only way out of the demographi­c doom loop. If the party sticks with its old white high school-educated base, it will die. They just aren’t making enough old white men. To have any shot of surviving as a major party, the GOP has to build a cross-racial alliance among the working class.

None of this works unless Republican­s can deracializ­e their appeal — by which I mean they must stop pandering to the racists in the party and stop presenting themselves and seeing themselves as the party of white people — and wage a class struggle between diverse workers in their coalition and the highly educated coastal manager and profession­al class in the Democratic coalition.

Rubio, Hawley, Sasse and Cotton are inching toward a GOP future. What are the odds they’ll succeed? They’ve got to be way under 50-50.

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 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? President Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy, during his first inaugural parade in 1981. The 40th president cast a long shadow on the Republican Party’s platform.
Associated Press file photo President Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy, during his first inaugural parade in 1981. The 40th president cast a long shadow on the Republican Party’s platform.
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