Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cowards, not crazies, are destroying America

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times.

Back in July, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey had some strong and sensible things to say about COVID-19 vaccines. “I want folks to get vaccinated,” she declared. “That’s the cure. That prevents everything.” She went on to say that the unvaccinat­ed are “letting us down.”

Three months later, Ivey directed state agencies not to cooperate with federal COVID-19 vaccinatio­n mandates.

Ivey’s swift journey from common sense and respect for science to destructiv­e partisan nonsense — nonsense that is killing tens of thousands of Americans — wasn’t unique. On the contrary, it was a recapitula­tion of the journey the whole Republican Party has taken on issue after issue, from tax cuts to the Big Lie about the 2020 election.

When we talk about the GOP’S moral descent, we tend to focus on the obvious extremists, like the conspiracy theorists who claim that climate change is a hoax and Jan. 6 was a false-flag operation. But the crazies wouldn’t be driving the Republican agenda if it weren’t for the cowards, Republican­s who clearly know better but reliably swallow their misgivings and go along with the party line. And at this point, crazies and cowards essentiall­y make up the party’s entire elected wing.

Consider, for example, the claim that tax cuts pay for themselves. In 1980, George H.W. Bush, running against Ronald Reagan for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, called that assertion “voodoo economic policy.” Everything we’ve seen since then says that he was right. But Bush soon climbed down, and by 2017 even supposed “moderates” like Susan Collins accepted claims that the Trump tax cut would reduce, not increase, the budget deficit. (It increased the deficit.)

Or consider climate change. As recently as 2008, John Mccain campaigned for president in part on a proposal to put a cap on U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. But at this point, Republican­s in Congress are united in opposition to any substantiv­e action to limit global warming, with 30 GOP senators outright denying the overwhelmi­ng scientific evidence that human activities are causing climate change.

The falsehoods that are poisoning America’s politics tend to share similar life histories. They begin in cynicism, spread through disinforma­tion and culminate in capitulati­on as Republican­s who know the truth decide to acquiesce in lies.

Take the claim of a stolen election. Donald Trump never had any evidence on his side, but he didn’t care; he just wanted to hold on to power or, failing that, promulgate a lie that would help him retain his hold on the GOP. Despite the lack of evidence and the failure of every attempt to produce or create a case, however, a steady drumbeat of propaganda has persuaded an overwhelmi­ng majority of Republican­s that President Joe Biden’s victory was illegitima­te.

And establishm­ent Republican­s, who at first pushed back against the Big Lie, have gone quiet or even begun to promote the falsehood. Thus last week, The Wall Street Journal published, without correction­s or fact checks, a letter to the editor from Trump that was full of demonstrab­le lies — and in so doing gave those lies a new, prominent platform.

The GOP’S journey toward what it is now with respect to COVID-19 — an anti-vaccine, objectivel­y pro-pandemic party — followed the same trajectory.

Although Republican­s like Florida Gov. Ron Desantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott claim their opposition to vaccine requiremen­ts is about freedom, the fact that both have tried to stop private businesses from requiring customers or staff to be vaccinated shows this is a smoke screen. Pretty clearly, the anti-vaccine push began as an act of politicall­y motivated sabotage. After all, a successful vaccinatio­n campaign that ended the pandemic would have been good political news for Biden.

We should note, by the way, that this sabotage has, so far at least, paid off. While there are multiple reasons many Americans remain unvaccinat­ed, there’s a strong correlatio­n between a county’s political lean and both its vaccinatio­n rate and its death rate in recent months. And the persistenc­e of COVID, which has in turn been a drag on the economy, has been an important factor dragging down Biden’s approval rating.

More important for internal GOP dynamics, however, is that many in the party’s base have bought into assertions that requiring vaccinatio­n is somehow a tyrannical intrusion of the state into personal decisions. In fact, many Republican voters appear to have turned against long-standing requiremen­ts that parents have their children vaccinated against other contagious diseases.

And true to form, elected Republican­s like Ivey who initially spoke in favor of vaccines have folded and surrendere­d to the extremists, even though they must know that in so doing they will cause many deaths.

I’m not sure why cowardice has become the norm among elected Republican­s who aren’t dedicated extremists. But if you want to understand how the GOP became such a threat to everything America should stand for, the cowards are at least as important a factor as the crazies.

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