Los Angeles Times

GOP must reject authoritar­ianism

Re “Wanted: GOP gumption,” Opinion, Jan. 10

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Matt Welch argues passionate­ly and persuasive­ly that Republican legislator­s ought not to cede authority to the president. But he doesn’t touch on why they have lost their spines.

Polls consistent­ly show strong support for the president among the onethird of the national electorate who vote Republican. So, to “poke the bear” raises the ire of their political constituen­cy. If Republican legislator­s lose their support, they will certainly lose their seats.

The reasons people give for supporting President Trump vary, but at bottom, it seems that authoritar­ian government suits them. The GOP stresses obedience to authority and party loyalty. That approach gets Republican voters to the polls and, together with gerrymande­ring, wins elections despite a minority position.

If Welch wants Republican legislator­s to stand up to the president, he should try persuading Republican voters to shift their support away from Trump and his authoritar­ian rule. Eleanor Egan

Costa Mesa

So Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) believes that by voting again on the budget previously agreed to and overriding the likely presidenti­al veto, Republican senators would be perceived as undercutti­ng the president, and “if we undercut the president that’s the end of his presidency and the end of our party, and we deserve to be punished.”

Graham has forgotten about the last election. The longer this unnecessar­y shutdown drags on, and the more federal employees suffer financiall­y, the more Republican voters will shift in 2020.

Republican senators demonstrat­e again and again how they have lost touch with the citizens of this country. They violate their oaths of office by placing loyalty to the Republican Party over loyalty to the United States. Judith Fenton Playa Vista

The Republican Party needs a spine, as Welch points out. Even more, it needs a sound defeat at the polls in 2020.

The disastrous Trump presidency is the end result of the party’s major missteps on the issues of income inequality, taxation, immigratio­n and infrastruc­ture. The party that plays so loosely with facts will be forced to reexamine itself once it must come to grips with the fact that it is out of power. David Hurwitz Calabasas

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