Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A fight worth taking on

- DAVID BROOKS

Last week I received a moving note from a young friend. In college, he realized he wanted to make a difference in this world by serving in government. His opinions leaned right, so the Republican Party became the vehicle for that service. He’s spent 10 years working his way up the Washington policy ladder.

But now he is dismayed by what the Republican Party has become. He’s disgusted by the whole political game. He’s thinking that maybe government is not where vital, meaningful work will take place over the next decades. He is in a career crisis, wondering if he should change the trajectory of his life. He asked for my advice:

Dear Young Republican,

I get it. I’ve been increasing­ly dismayed and disgusted by the Republican Party since the moment Sarah Palin first stepped onto the national stage. My interests have shifted to those who are weaving the social fabric at the community level, and if you find a way to make a difference out of government, I salute you.

But we do face a political crisis in this country, and the Republican Party is the epicenter of that crisis. Destiny has placed you, all of you young Republican­s, at the crucial spot in the line. We either have two responsibl­e political parties in this country or we do not. And it will be reforming Republican­s, with your energies and ideas, that determine the outcome.

The Republican Party is going to hold a lot of power in the years ahead. Even with a losing candidate at the top of the ticket, the GOP managed to pick up 12 House seats in 2020. It is possible that the Republican­s will control the House and the Senate in just two years.

The Democrats have become the party of the educated metropolit­an class. There will always be a lot of Americans who do not share the interests or values of that class and they tend to vote Republican.

The party is politicall­y viable, but it is intellectu­ally and morally bankrupt. Under Trump it became an apocalypti­c personalit­y cult. But you should know, as I’m sure you do, that there are many Republican­s who want to change their party and make it a vehicle for conservati­ve ideas.

These people are energized as never before and feel their whole lives have been preparatio­n for the coming moral, intellectu­al and political struggle. This is a struggle to create a Republican Party that is democratic and not authoritar­ian, patriotic and not nationalis­tic, conservati­ve and not reactionar­y, benevolent and not belligeren­t, intellectu­ally self-confident and not apocalypti­c and dishonest.

But is it your struggle? I guess I would ask myself two questions: Are you dedicated to the ideas that are at the heart of current conservati­sm: the need to hold off the China threat, the need to restrain the power of cultural elites and centralize­d government, the need to build an economy that functions for the working class. Second, are you attached to actual Republican­s? The conservati­ve movement left an opening for Trump because it didn’t understand what was on the mind of actual voters.

The party has the potential to be something truly good for America: a multiracia­l working-class coalition, a party that serves the interest of all those who don’t fit in with the definition of the good life that is promulgate­d by the meritocrac­y. It’s to be a champion for those who didn’t complete college, don’t want to leave their hometown for the big city, and have a set of traditiona­l values centered around their faith.

To become that party, the GOP has to displace the cultural circus with actual policymaki­ng. Trumpism is a media strategy, not a political philosophy; it’s a bid to win endless attention and stoke enmity.

Republican­s will beat Trumpism not by confrontin­g it directly but by focusing on policymaki­ng, by becoming a regular party once again. As Sen. Ben Sasse put it, it’s to make the Republican Party about more than one dude. You may have noticed that, Mitt Romney and Tom Cotton are teaming up on an effort to raise the minimum wage and enforce immigratio­n laws, two plans to boost working class wages. That’s what there needs to be more of.

Will this work? Is the Republican Party salvageabl­e? Nobody knows. Right now Republican­s are rallying around Trump because they believe Democrats and the media are going after him. It’s pie in the sky to ask rank-and-file Republican­s to denounce the man they’ve clung to. But, as has been observed, we American don’t solve our problems, we just leave them behind.

Suppose new leaders, issues and movements arise? Suppose the shows that premiere in the coming years’ seasons make the shows that premiered in 2016 look tired and passe? The party that moved from Theodore Roosevelt to Calvin Coolidge to Dwight Eisenhower to Ronald Reagan to Donald Trump is going to eventually move on once again. That future is waiting to be created.

It’s not my struggle, and maybe it’s not your struggle. But it is certainly a noble way for the right people to spend their lives.

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