Baltimore Sun

GOP stuck in a corner over Ukraine

- By Jonathan Bernstein Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Extremist Republican­s didn’t waste time bashing President Joe Biden’s surprise weekend visit to Kyiv. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia called the trip “incredibly insulting,” while Florida’s Matt Gaetz tweeted that Biden was “ditching America for Ukraine.”

But a large swath of GOP lawmakers were largely quiet about the trip, exposing once again the deep fissure within the party about how to handle Biden’s support for Ukraine, a policy that is both popular and generally thought to be successful. It is yet another sign of Republican dysfunctio­n, and it’s guaranteed to give responsibl­e Republican­s headaches.

Normally, when a president does something voters approve of, out-party politician­s either go along or just talk about something else. Indeed, sometimes out-party politician­s will support the president during foreign policy crises even if it represents a policy failure by the administra­tion; if U.S. troops or other citizens are in danger or an unpopular nation is doing something ugly, politician­s are usually wary of using rhetoric that sounds as if they are siding with an enemy.

Supporting the president can hurt the out-party in the short term. “Rally around the flag” effects — in which the president’s approval ratings shoot up — happen when politician­s from both parties support the president’s actions in a high-profile foreign affairs event. But the bounce generally doesn’t last long, so while it’s nice for a president to get a temporary lift, the out-party loses little from just waiting out the moment.

There are other reasons the party as a whole and individual politician­s might not want to automatica­lly criticize everything the president does. For one, the president has the biggest megaphone, so it’s hard to win the argument.

For another, if out-party politician­s care about their reputation­s with nonpartisa­n experts (and by extension with swing voters), they may want to be selective in their opposition. It’s possible that attacks on, say, President Jimmy Carter during the Iran hostage crisis or President George W. Bush over wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n were taken more seriously because many of the critics had initially rallied to those presidents in the early days of those crises.

But traditiona­l political incentives don’t carry a lot of weight with the Republican extremist faction in Congress, whose main goal is to differenti­ate themselves from mainstream conservati­ves. Under that formula, something a Democratic president

does that is not only popular and successful but also generally aligns with Republican policy positions isn’t a challenge for these lawmakers — it’s an opportunit­y.

After all, if they take an extreme position on abortion or spending on domestic programs, there is a good chance that mainstream conservati­ves will follow along. But accuse Joe Biden of an impeachabl­e offense for supporting Ukraine against Russia? Normal (very conservati­ve!) Republican­s aren’t going to go long with that, giving the extremists what they want.

For the Republican Party as a whole however, the extremists’ game is a disaster. A major group preferring disharmony to a united front makes election battles tougher and governing more difficult once in office. It produces ugly scenes for the party like those during the State of the Union speech, because acting out in public is one way to differenti­ate from the rest of the party

when policy isn’t available. It makes it harder for the party to embrace popular policy options. And it generally makes the party dysfunctio­nal, leading to the continuing Republican habit of nominating terrible candidates.

On Ukraine in particular, there is a potentiall­y significan­t downside risk for Republican­s. Usually, single issues just don’t matter much in elections. But usually, parties sufficient­ly tailor their positions to public opinion to avoid being way out of step.

Perhaps that’s where Republican­s will wind up by November 2024. Or perhaps voters will ignore foreign policy. It’s hard to know. In the meantime, mainstream conservati­ves have to choose between allowing their extremist peers to stand as the party’s representa­tives on Ukraine, and taking them on and risking the possibilit­y that conservati­ve media will turn on them. At the very least, the radicals are turning

Ukraine into a wedge issue for the party, while Democrats stand largely united.

It’s bad for the country as well. Robust political parties have the virtue in a democracy of gathering up disparate interests and forcing them to work together and compromise internally, so that they can try to win elections and impose their preference­s on the rest of the nation. That promotes healthy democratic behavior; people with narrow interests must learn to work with others, cutting deals when necessary and accepting limits.

Parties facing elections also have a strong incentive to appeal to a broad swath of voters so that voters are happy and reelect them, while parties out of office figure out why people are unhappy about and propose solutions. When party factions instead just pick fights, the benefits of democracy are lost.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Joe Biden walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday near a cathedral in a surprise visit to Kyiv.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Joe Biden walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday near a cathedral in a surprise visit to Kyiv.

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