Baltimore Sun Sunday

Hogan’s playbook as he eyes 2024

- By Edward Hudgins Edward Hudgins is a native Marylander, founder of the nonprofit Human Achievemen­t Alliance, and writer and editor of “The Republican Party Civil War: Will Freedom Win?” He can be reached at ehudgins@humanachie­vementalli­ance.org.

Larry Hogan, Republican governor here in heavily Democratic Maryland, is no fan of President Donald Trump. Mr. Hogan wrote-in “Ronald Reagan” on his 2020 ballot and has called for a bigger-tent GOP going forward. And the closeness of this election shows a need for a Republican strategy that builds on the party’s strengths and helps overcome the country’s polarizati­on. So how to move ahead?

My decades of experience in public policy and socio-cultural issues in Maryland and beyond suggest our governor should follow a transforma­tional sevenpoint GOP recipe, seasoned, in part, by our state’s unique insights.

First, be principled. It goes without saying that Trump didn’t help himself or the country with insults and crude rhetoric, alienating many who might otherwise have supported him. A Republican, especially in Maryland, should always be civil. But this doesn’t mean splitting the difference with politician­s on the other side, pushing guaranteed-to-fail, stale policies that limit liberty and prosperity. Republican­s should not shrink from battles ahead, but they must fight on principles, not personalit­ies.

Second, keep the successful Trump/ GOP policies. Before the virus, the economy was strong. Unemployme­nt rates for Black and Hispanic Americans were among the lowest on record, and both job creation and the stock market were robust. This was thanks to the administra­tion’s tax cuts and reductions in stifling regulation­s that served no public good. As the country emerges from the pandemic, policies that encourage entreprene­urship rather than heap tax-spend-regulate burdens on the economy will be essential.

Third, help usher in the exponentia­l technology age. With our I-270 Technology Corridor, we Marylander­s understand that infotech, nanotech, biotech, robotics and artificial intelligen­ce promise a future of unimaginab­le prosperity with longer, healthier lives for all. Indeed, the sequencing of the human genome by Craig Venter, a breakthrou­gh that could one day make living to 200 the new normal, occurred right here in Rockville. Yet many fear robots taking over jobs, or AI and geneticall­y engineered superhuman­s ruling us and call for government restrictio­ns. The GOP needs to allay these fears and be the party of the techno-future that will be as transforma­tive as the Industrial Revolution.

Fourth, lead an education revolution.

Thirteen high schools in Baltimore in 2017 had zero students proficient in math, and results are spotty even in prosperous Montgomery County. The one-size-fits-all, assembly line schooling model can’t even meet the current needs of enterprise­s for employees with requisite talents, much less the needs for a techno-future. The answer here and throughout the country is not to throw more taxpayer money at the problem. Rather, the GOP should empower parents to direct their tax dollars and children to whichever schools or program they judge to be best. Allow educationa­l innovators in the free market to do what tech innovators have done: transform the sector to new heights of efficiency.

Fifth, break the cycle of decline in the poorest neighborho­ods.

Over the past half-century, Baltimore has degenerate­d into a dystopian dump. It mirrors the decline in Cleveland, Detroit, St. Louis and many other once-great metropolis­es. “Virtue signaling” and the same failed policies are no longer an option. The GOP should follow the example of the late Republican leader Jack Kemp. He worked with the residents of poor neighborho­ods, for example, to give them ownership of their deteriorat­ing, crime-ridden public housing projects so they could drive out the criminals, fix the plumbing and take control. The GOP should challenge the Democrats’ inner-city hegemony.

Sixth, engage with honest Democrats and liberals in open discussion­s about the country’s longer-term problems.

A rational, in-context approach means fighting against the cancel culture, the use of intimidati­on and censorship to shut down free thought. The GOP should enlist allies, across party lines, to stop the indoctrina­tion into postmodern­ist dogma and the censorship found in many American universiti­es. Steven Pinker, Glenn Greenwald and other liberals are pushing back against the new totalitari­ans. Only minds unafraid of intellectu­al thugs will open the country’s future of human achievemen­t.

Seven, celebrate individual merit and achievemen­t, rejecting identity politics. Make Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream of a nation where individual­s “will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character” the party’s credo. Neo-racist identity politics that instead places value in accidents of birth is a moral insult to all individual­s of whatever race, ethnicity or sexual orientatio­n who create their own prosperity through their own moral virtues.

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