Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gather the Know-Nothings

- HUGH HEWITT

The Republican Party was birthed in the 1850s, and most people know that Abraham Lincoln was its second nominee for president and its first successful one. The party that nominated him in 1860 was the product of a deft absorption of members from another party: the Know-Nothing party.

The Know-Nothings were a party built on opposition: “anti-liquor, anti-Catholic, and antiimmigr­ant,” though Northern and Southern party members were split on the question of slavery.

The Republican­s were primarily a new party of liberty and opposition to “the slave power,” but before they could approach power, they needed to co-opt northern Know-Nothings. This they did by various moves—deft and often disingenuo­us nods and winks. “Of their principles,” Lincoln wrote in 1855, “I think little better than I do of the slavery extensioni­sts,” yet they “are mostly my old political and personal friends.”

These nativists were absorbed into the much broader struggle against the South. Their party disappeare­d. Their political DNA, never a majority but never insignific­ant, passed on through 16 decades of GOP evolution. The movement collapsed into the convulsion of the era, but a platform of grievances of those who perceived themselves to have built the country against those new to the country did not die off, and it never will for any nation open to immigrants. There will always be this tension between the new and striving and the old who have investment and labor already sunk into the land.

President Donald Trump took over the GOP riding the old Know-Nothing movement’s modern counterpar­t, evolved to no longer be antiCathol­ic or pro-temperance, but very much a reflection of rapid change and disinterme­diation, the fears and shocks of terrorism and economic panic of the new millennium combined with 24/7 media. Where the first Republican­s beat the Know-Nothings in the 1850s, the GOP establishm­ent was helpless to stop Trump’s extraordin­ary hostile takeover of the party.

But the party doesn’t change just because it’s captained for a time by an outsider channeling the grievances—some real, some imagined—of millions of stakeholde­rs seeing what they built dissolve into uncertaint­y. Hardly 1 in 10 elected Republican­s cheers all of the president’s agenda, but close to 90 percent are willing to hang on for the ride, at least for a while.

Trump delivers traditiona­l Republican­s the military buildup, deregulati­on, tax cuts and, crucially, judicial appointmen­ts of the sort that would make the Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan and both Bush coalitions happy. But the party has red lines, and one of them is national strength and national security in service of the rule of law. It is not isolationi­st, and it will shatter before abandoning allies for dictators.

When Trump fell into the “Nixon trap” of believing himself able to change geopolitic­s with a single flip of the foreign policy script in Helsinki (just as Barack Obama indulged the same vanity vis-a-vis Iran), the party’s long-dominant internatio­nalist-realist majority recoiled. Dealing with Vladimir Putin is fine depending on the terms. Pretending he is anything other than a dictator who has repeatedly attacked not just our elections but also U.S. allies and interests across the globe is not.

The nativist pulse of the 1850s was not a majoritari­an movement. It was a junior partner in the coalition that powered the Republican Party to save the Union and the Constituti­on. That the pulse returned and captured the presidency does not change the party of freedom’s true north. That lodestar is protecting the Constituti­on and equality of opportunit­y for all Americans regardless of race, gender, religion, ethnicity and sexual orientatio­n, and doing so with military strength and clarity about who are our friends.

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