The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Let’s hope Boehner’s party settles in for a long slumber

- Pat Buchanan He writes for Creators Syndicate.

“There is no Republican Party. There’s a Trump party,” John Boehner told a Mackinac, Michigan, gathering of the GOP faithful last week. “The Republican Party is kind of taking a nap somewhere.”

Ex-Speaker Boehner should probably re-check the old party’s pulse, for the Bush-Boehner GOP may not just be napping. It could be comatose.

Consider. That GOP was dedicated to free trade, open borders, amnesty and using U.S. power to punish aggressors and “end tyranny in our world.” That GOP set out to create a new world order where dictatorsh­ips were threatened with “regime change,” and democratic capitalism was the new order of the ages.

Yet, Donald Trump captured the Republican nomination and won the presidency — by saying goodbye to all that.

Bush-Boehner Republican­ism appears to be as dead today as was Harding-Coolidge Republican­ism after 1933.

What fractured and overwhelme­d the Bush-Boehner Republican Party?

First, demography. The mass immigratio­n of Third World peoples that began with the 1965 immigratio­n act, and the decline in the birth rate of nativeborn Americans, began to swamp the Nixon-Reagan New Majority.

Second, the collapse of the Soviet Empire and USSR removed the party’s great unifying cause from Eisenhower to Bush I — the Cold War.

After the Red Army went home, “America First” had a new appeal!

Third, faithful to the free trade cult in which they were raised, Republican­s championed NAFTA, the WTO, and MFN for China.

Historians will look back in amazement at how America’s free trade zealots gave away the greatest manufactur­ing base the world had ever seen, as they quoted approvingl­y 18th- and 19th-century scribblers whose ideas had done so much to bring down their own country, Great Britain.

Between 1997 and 2017, the EU ran up, at America’s expense, trade surpluses in goods in excess of $2 trillion, while we also picked up the bill for Europe’s defense.

Between 1992 and 2016, China was allowed to run $4 trillion in trade surpluses at our expense, converting herself into the world’s first manufactur­ing power.

Fourth, under Bush II and Obama, the U.S. intervened massively in the Near and Middle East — in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Yemen. And the forces that pushed us into those conflicts, and so disillusio­ned the nation that it elected Barack Obama, are back, pushing for a new war, on Iran. They may get this war, too.

Yet, given the anti-interventi­onist and anti-war stance of Trump’s winning campaign, and of the Bernie Sanders campaign, U.S. involvemen­t in Middle East wars seems less America’s future than it does her past.

After his 16 months in office, it appears the Trump presidency, no matter how brief, is going to be a watershed moment in U.S. and world history, and in the future of the GOP. Trump not only defeated 16 Bush Republican­s, he presented an agenda on immigratio­n, border security, amnesty, interventi­on abroad, the Middle East, NAFTA, free trade, Putin and Russia that was a rejection of what the Bush-Boehner Party had stood for.

If the Republican Party is “napping,” let it slumber, undisturbe­d, for its time has come and gone. We are in a new world.

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