Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP’s problems run deep

- By Jennifer Rubin Jennifer Rubin writes for The Washington Post.

No one should be surprised that Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, one of the instigator­s behind the effort to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election, has refused to break ties with True Texas Project, a group that is so divisive that other conservati­ves have distanced themselves from it.

The Washington Post reports: “As [Donald] Trump’s presidency normalized and elevated farright, anti-immigrant voices, TTP’s messaging grew more extreme, at times echoing white-supremacis­t talking points.”

Frankly, I would have found it hard to imagine if the senator didn’t stick with a rabid group such as the True Texas Project, given that he has trafficked in the Big Lie that the election was stolen, defended anti-voting-rights measures that fall disproport­ionately on nonwhite and poor voters, and refused to condemn the disgraced former president for instigatin­g a riot (not to mention his record of racist remarks).

There is a bigger problem than Cruz and a tea party group. Fifty U.S. senators and 212 House members belong to a group that mouthed Russian propaganda; that tried to disenfranc­hise millions of voters, focusing on major metropolit­an areas with large Black population­s; that still reveres the former president and tries to play down the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on; that frequents a cable TV news channel that spouts replacemen­t theory and other white supremacis­ts themes; that insists Washington, D.C., is not “well-rounded” but that Wyoming is; that undermines women of color nominated for top government posts with smears and lies intended to make them seem anti-police despite police endorsemen­ts; that suggests having fewer people vote is better; that continues to beat the drum of “voter fraud” even though scores of audits and lawsuits could not find any evidence beyond sporadic instances of wrongdoing; and that takes offense whenever someone points to systemic racism in policing, criminal justice, health care and other aspects of American life.

This increasing­ly radical, anti-democratic and nativist group is hiding in plain sight as one of the two major political parties. Driven by desperatio­n and panic, it increasing­ly resembles a cult in which reality must conform to the demands of cult worship.

In November, Katherine Stewart, author of “The Power Worshipper­s: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalis­m,” wrote in The New York Times that what binds Republican­s together is “a radical political ideology that is profoundly hostile to democracy and pluralism, and a certain political style that seeks to provoke moral panic, rewards the paranoid and views every partisan conflict as a conflagrat­ion, the end of the world.” The same force also explains why they remain loyal to a leader who promises to save them from supposed domination by people of color and anti-Christian zealots.

Take away the GOP name and describe its belief system and unhinged fervor. What’s left? A radicalize­d, nativist group that now repudiates (or pretends to repudiate) the results of the election. As Stewart wrote: “The point of conspirato­rial narratives and apocalypti­c rhetoric is to lay the groundwork for a politics of total obstructio­n, in preparatio­n for the return of a ‘legitimate’ ruler.” She warns that we “ignore the political implicatio­ns for our democracy at our peril.”

In short, I am far less concerned about Cruz’s embrace of a small band of extremists in Texas than I am about the party that he and his Republican colleagues belong to. That’s where the most dangerous, anti-democratic and nativist politician­s reside.

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