Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Today’s Republican­s need to get out of their own way

- Clarence Page cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

As the House moved past a dozen ballots in failed attempts to elect California Republican Kevin McCarthy to be House speaker, a catchy refrain from the musical “Hamilton” grew louder in my mind:

“You don’t have the votes, you don’t have the votes…”

Ah, how embarrassi­ng it must have been for McCarthy, who used to whip votes for then-Speaker John Boehner during President Barack Obama’s presidency, to fail repeatedly in mustering up enough votes for his own speakershi­p.

The larger question: What’s happened to Republican unity?

Looking back, it doesn’t take much of an autopsy to see the fractured state of today’s Republican Party as the latest twist in a 30-year GOP power struggle, an era that began with then-Georgia Rep. Newt Gingrich’s displaceme­nt of then-House Minority Leader Bob Michel in the 1990s.

It was a different political era. Although Michel was never part of the majority party during his 38 years in the House, he was notable for striking bipartisan bargains and friendship­s. In a model of bipartisan civility, he famously shared rides on weekends with fellow Illinoisan Rep. Dan Rostenkows­ki, a leading Democrat.

That spirit of comity faded after President Bill Clinton’s Democrats lost the Senate and House for the first time in 40 years. Gingrich’s Contract With America agenda helped Republican­s nationaliz­e the race and initially strengthen­ed Gingrich, who shared with Clinton an affection for big-thinking policy issues.

But by the mid-1990s, Republican­s’ failure to achieve common ground forced government shutdowns that Clinton used to his advantage. Casting Republican­s as opponents of such popular programs as Medicare, Medicaid and public-school education, Clinton struck a middle-of-theroad agenda that helped him survive his impeachmen­t in 1998.

Clinton’s job approval actually rose partly in a backlash against his impeachmen­t. Republican­s lost House seats in that year’s elections and Gingrich resigned from the speakershi­p, taking up a new role as an internet-era elder statesman and media pundit.

In that role, it was illuminati­ng to watch him tear into the small group of House Republican­s who refused to support McCarthy’s speaker bid. On “Fox & Friends” Wednesday, Gingrich said the holdouts are “blackmaili­ng” McCarthy, the party and the American public by stopping the conference from being able to move forward with its agenda.

“I don’t know what their endgame is,” he said.

I agree. As with the mob that assaulted the Capitol on Jan. 6, two years ago, the current House dysfunctio­n appears to have deep roots, a combinatio­n of the Stop the Steal aftermath of Donald Trump’s presidency on top of the Obama-era tea party and the 8-year-old Freedom Caucus in the GOP’s far-right congressio­nal wing.

And while they figure out whatever their endgame might be, they’ve got a great vehicle in today’s media age for building their own profiles and campaign coffers, independen­t of the traditiona­l party leadership that used to maintain more control on party unity and messaging.

The same happens on the left, of course. Obama broke new ground in his use of Twitter and other internet campaignin­g but Donald Trump, among many other conservati­ves, showed he could play that game, too, for better or worse.

The result has been an informal but quite potent rise of new stars of performati­ve politics like Reps.

Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Matt Gaetz of Florida as de facto leaders in opposition to McCarthy, even though you could hardly squeeze a playing card between their ideologica­l difference­s.

Political scientists Matt Grossman and David Hopkins argue in their 2016 book “Asymmetric Politics” that the difference­s between today’s major parties are not about personalit­ies but about structure. “While the Democratic Party is fundamenta­lly a group coalition,” they write, “the Republican Party can be most accurately characteri­zed as the vehicle of an ideologica­l movement.”

The same can be said about Democrats, though in recent years we have seen progressiv­e Democrats largely embraced by the party establishm­ent, while Republican populism is more freewheeli­ng and unpredicta­ble in its challenges to the system.

Either way, McCarthy and his fellow traditiona­lists have a big challenge on their hands as they try to restore some civility and order within their own party. Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi had to do that, too. But, compared with today’s Republican­s, she made it look easy.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Members of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, from left, Rep. Dan Bishop, D-N.C., Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, and Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., meet with reporters in Statuary Hall at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Friday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Members of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, from left, Rep. Dan Bishop, D-N.C., Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, and Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., meet with reporters in Statuary Hall at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Friday.
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