Chattanooga Times Free Press

JOE BIDEN WAS WRONG ABOUT THE REPUBLICAN ‘EPIPHANY’

- Paul Waldman

Throughout the 2020 campaign, Joe Biden characteri­zed congressio­nal Republican­s as suffering from a kind of delusion brought on by the illness of Donald Trump; once the president departed, they’d come back to their senses and find ways to work with Biden.

While many people derided this idea as naive, Biden stuck with it. Once Trump is defeated, Biden said in May 2019, “you will see an epiphany occur among many of my Republican friends.”

The next month, he said: “With Trump gone, you’re going to begin to see things change.”

Biden was mostly expressing hope — and saying the kind of thing a lot of people would like to be true.

Instead, the politician­s and their voters are trapped in a seemingly unbreakabl­e, mutually reinforcin­g cycle of not just partisansh­ip but outright delusion, one that makes cooperatio­n with Democrats all but impossible.

Let me illustrate by way of a depressing poll result reported by Reuters:

“Three months after a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol to try to overturn his November election loss, about half of Republican­s believe the siege was largely a non-violent protest or was the handiwork of left-wing activists ‘trying to make Trump look bad,’ a new Reuters/Ipsos poll has found.”

If you were an average Republican and you wanted to believe the 2020 election was stolen from Trump, it wouldn’t be all that hard to convince yourself. You’d have lots of conservati­ve media stars telling you it’s what happened, while lots of your party’s politician­s alleged widespread fraud.

But now imagine you wanted to believe something else: That the Capitol was not attacked on Jan. 6 by violent Trump supporters, but instead it was actually a “false flag” operation organized by leftists. That would be harder, since it was a specific incident, we’ve seen all the video and the arrests of people deep inside far-right movements, and there is not a single iota of evidence that it was actually antifa or the Symbionese Liberation Army or anyone other than the obvious culprits.

And yet that’s what so many Republican­s believe.

They believe this even though only a few Republican officehold­ers have gone so far as to claim that’s what happened. Unlike with the election lie, you don’t have dozens upon dozens of prominent Republican­s claiming it was a false flag operation.

But every Republican understand­s the radical delusions of their constituen­ts. And even in cases where they know perfectly well that a good portion of their supporters have pretty much lost their minds, the numbers of those supporters are too big to ignore. So they indulge them or change the subject — while filing those opinions away for future reference.

Then when it comes time to consider other issues, it becomes part of the calculatio­n. If you’re a Republican officehold­er, you know that your supporters are deep into this kind of conspirato­rial thinking, and you’ve probably responded to your base’s radicaliza­tion by feeding them a diet of culture-war nonsense, from Mr. Potato Head to Dr. Seuss, to show them that you despise the libs as much as they do.

Which, of course, has made them hate the idea of you working with Democrats even more — they want their representa­tives to fight!

This cycle no longer needs Trump himself to keep it turning.

Then when some legislatio­n is in the offing that in theory could be bipartisan — a COVID-19 relief bill or an infrastruc­ture bill — they know they won’t be rewarded for voting with members of the other party. Everyone may claim bipartisan­ship is worthwhile, but when they actually have a chance to engage in it, the risks look too great.

To be clear, the Democratic electorate doesn’t much desire for bipartisan­ship either. But there’s less of a Democratic market for performati­ve bashing of the other side.

Biden may get half of his wish: Trump is already fading, and we don’t yet know how much influence he’ll retain in the GOP. But either way, there will be no epiphanies.

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