Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

GOP is fighting democracy, not Democrats

- Dana Milbank

Georgia Republican­s clearly are hoping they can suppress enough Black votes to erase the Democrats’ narrow advantage that gave them both of the state’s Senate seats and Joe Biden its electoral votes. But Georgia is just one of the 43 states collective­ly contemplat­ing 253 bills this year with provisions restrictin­g voting access, according to a tally by the Brennan Center for Justice.

On a recent conservati­ve Bulwark podcast, two admirable never-Trumpers marveled at what has become of the Republican Party since President Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the election.

“I am a little amazed by the willingnes­s to go just authoritar­ian, to really go anti-democratic,” Bulwark editor-at-large Bill Kristol said.

Columnist Mona Charen was likewise puzzled. “The attraction of authoritar­ianism, I don’t know, Bill,” she said. “I’m really at a loss.”

And I’m at a loss to understand their confusion. The Republican Party’s dalliance with authoritar­ianism can be explained in one word: race.

Trump’s overt racism turned the GOP into, essentiall­y, a white-nationalis­t party, in which racial animus is the main motivator of Republican votes. But in an increasing­ly multicultu­ral America, such people don’t form a majority. The only route to power for a white-nationalis­t party, then, is to become anti-democratic: to keep nonwhite people from voting and to discredit elections themselves. In short, democracy is working against Republican­s — and so Republican­s are working against democracy.

You don’t have to study demography to see that race is at the core of the GOP’s tilt toward the authoritar­ian. You need only look at what happened last month.

The Georgia governor signed a bill into law that brazenly attempts to deter Black voters. The law scales back Sunday voting — taking direct aim at the longtime “Souls to the Polls” tradition in which Black voters cast their ballots after church on Sundays. The law also increases voter ID requiremen­ts — known to disenfranc­hise Black voters disproport­ionately — and even makes it illegal to serve food or drinks to voters waiting in long lines outside polling places; lines are typically longer at minority precincts.

Georgia Republican­s clearly are hoping they can suppress enough Black votes to erase the Democrats’ narrow advantage that gave them both of the state’s Senate seats and Joe Biden its electoral votes. But Georgia is just one of the 43 states collective­ly contemplat­ing 253 bills this year with provisions restrictin­g voting access, according to a tally by the Brennan Center for Justice.

The Supreme Court’s majority has signaled it would be open to more such voting restrictio­ns. In oral arguments, the conservati­ve justices indicated last month that they would uphold two Arizona laws that would have the effect of disproport­ionately disqualify­ing the votes of non-white citizens. One law throws out ballots cast in the wrong precinct, a problem that affects minority voters twice as much as white voters because polling places move more frequently in minority neighborho­ods. The other law bans the practice of ballot collection — derided by Republican­s as ballot “harvesting” — which is disproport­ionately used by minority voters, in particular Arizona’s Native Americans on reservatio­ns.

Representi­ng the Arizona Republican Party, lawyer Michael Carvin explained why the party supports laws tossing out ballots: “Politics is a zero-sum game.”

It was a stark if inadverten­t admission that Republican­s have abandoned the idea of appealing to new voters.

Then, House Republican­s mounted lockstep opposition to HR1, a bill by Democrats attempting to expand voting rights. The bill would, among other things, create automatic voter registrati­on, set minimum standards for early voting and end the practice of partisan gerrymande­ring.

In the House debate, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., sounding like Trump, made unfounded claims of “voter fraud” and asserted that the law would mean “future voters could be dead or illegal immigrants or maybe even registered two to three times.”

“This,” McCarthy said, “is an unparallel­ed political power grab.”

So, in the twisted reasoning of this white-nationalis­t incarnatio­n of the Republican Party, laws that make it easier for all citizens to vote are a power grab by Democrats.

The foundation of a white-nationalis­t GOP has been building for half a century, since Richard Nixon’s Southern strategy, through Ronald Reagan’s “welfare queen” and George H.W. Bush’s Willie Horton. But Trump took fear of non-whites and immigrants to a whole new level.

Researcher­s have repeatedly documented that racial resentment is the single most important factor motivating Republican­s and Republican-leaning voters. They have also shown that white evangelica­l Christians, a huge part of the GOP base and Trump’s most reliable supporters, are highly motivated by appeals to white supremacy. By contrast, Democratic voters — white and non-white — are primarily driven by their favorable views toward a multiracia­l America.

President Biden’s victory reveals the obvious political problem with the Republican move toward white nationalis­m: When voters turn out in large numbers, Democrats win. And the odds will only get worse for Republican­s as racial minorities become the majority and the young, overwhelmi­ngly progressiv­e on race, replace the old.

This is why Republican­s aren’t really fighting Democrats. They’re fighting democracy.

Dana Milbank is a columnist for The Washington Post.

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