Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP RACING TOWARD AUTHORITAR­IANISM

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Whether Texas Gov. Greg Abbott makes good on his recent vow to pardon a man convicted of killing a legally armed Black Lives Matter protester remains to be seen. The killer had announced his homicidal intent on social media before the killing. News reports also noted that he had posted racist content online and had sought contact with underage girls, the latter of which may complicate the governor’s messaging.

Regardless of how Abbott proceeds, the governor’s urge to pardon a killer for no discernibl­e reason other than that the killer belongs to Team Red and the victim is claimed by Team Blue tells us how deep into the authoritar­ian jungle the Republican Party has penetrated. It’s reminiscen­t of Trump’s vocal desire to pardon those convicted of crimes committed during the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The practice of keeping killers and thugs out of jail, and thus employable for political dirty work, is a quintessen­tially authoritar­ian one.

Trump’s violent assault on rule of law hasn’t been replicated in any of the 50 states. There have been no attempted coups in state capitals, right-wing militia activity in Michigan notwithsta­nding. But in Republican­dominated states across the nation, the party is no longer ambling toward authoritar­ianism. Despite a functional­ly democratic, postTrump calm in the White House, many states are racing toward an authoritar­ian future.

The legislatur­es of North Carolina and Wisconsin, whose rightward lurch has been underwritt­en by the U.S. Supreme Court’s endorsemen­t of extreme gerrymande­rs, are emerging models of competitiv­e authoritar­ianism where elections undermine, rather than validate, democratic choice. In red-state cities that vote Democratic, Republican­s have compounded racial gerrymande­rs and vote suppressio­n by disempower­ing opponents directly. Texas, Tennessee, Mississipp­i and other red states have been waging war on home rule to strip city residents of the power to select their own government­s and policies. Republican­s have removed, or tried to remove, elected prosecutor­s in Philadelph­ia, Tampa and St. Louis, effectivel­y seeking to nullify local election results. Ohio Republican­s are following the example of Arkansas and Missouri, where GOP legislator­s undermined the ballot initiative process to prevent citizens from enacting their preferred policies, including abortion policy. And from coast to coast, in Congress, statehouse­s and county seats, lying about the 2020 election remains a Republican rite, and a promise of future attacks on truth.

In Kansas, Montana and Tennessee this month, Republican legislator­s silenced or expelled duly elected legislator­s — all Black or female — who collective­ly represent tens of thousands of Americans. Republican­s now disfranchi­se swaths of citizenry on the grounds that GOP politician­s don’t like working alongside their representa­tives. The GOP’s public explanatio­n is that the party of Marjorie Taylor Greene is a stickler for decorum.

In Montana, Republican­s blocked trans lawmaker Zooey Zephyr from the House floor, ostensibly for breaching decorum. Zephyr had asserted that legislatio­n to ban genderaffi­rming care for minors would encourage suicides, leaving blood on lawmakers’ hands. The legislatio­n was passed and signed into law by Gov. Greg Gianforte, who was charged with assault in 2017 after he attacked a reporter who had asked him a question about health-care policy. (Gianforte initially lied about the assault but was contradict­ed by a witness who worked for Fox News.) Decorum is a sometime thing in Montana. So is democratic representa­tion: The rights of Zephyr’s more than 10,000 constituen­ts have been compromise­d.

The Republican focus on transgende­r Americans isn’t just obsessive, it’s another authoritar­ian tic. More than 500 bills have been introduced in 49 states seeking to regulate trans health care or behavior. Yet a 2022 poll by Pew Research Center found that only 1.6% of U.S. adults say they are transgende­r or nonbinary.

The relentless attacks on a tiny subpopulat­ion are consistent with GOP bans on literature and history books on the grounds that whatever induces discomfort in the most sensitive Republican should be legally suppressed.

American democracy has been under attack from authoritar­ian forces in the Republican Party for most of this century. But as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other GOP officials have ratcheted up the use of state power to suppress political opposition and force academic, civic and corporate actors to genuflect at the GOP altar, democratic space in red states has been shrinking at a rapid pace. To mobilize conservati­ves, Republican­s generate fears about everything from drag shows to Disney World. Once such threats are identified, they must be neutralize­d.

While the White House is no longer a nexus of flagrant theft and anti-democratic attacks, the authoritar­ian movement hasn’t stalled. It extends beyond Trump and will persist with or without him. Authoritar­ian executive action will no doubt return quickly to the White House if Republican­s regain control. That the two leading candidates for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination are openly authoritar­ian in posture, rhetoric and policies confirms the dangerous direction of the GOP.

 ?? ?? Francis Wilkinson
Francis Wilkinson

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