Morning Sun

GOP paranoia could cost party in November

- By Jonathan Bernstein Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy.

The terror that mainstream conservati­ve Republican politician­s have felt over the threat of being called insufficie­ntly conservati­ve has made governing difficult for them since the 1990s. But whenever they were the minority party in Washington, they could correctly assume that there was little electoral cost to mollifying the party’s right wing.

This year, that presumptio­n may no longer hold up. With an incumbent president whose approval rating barely tops 40% and plenty of discontent about the economy, Democrats should be facing heavy losses. Instead, there are signs Republican might only make minor gains in the November midterms.

The GOP could even lose seats in the Senate and among governors. And that is all due to Republican fears of being labeled RINO.

From the 2016 presidenti­al campaign through the second impeachmen­t vote in the Senate, Republican­s have had plenty of opportunit­ies to rid themselves of Trump. Yet time after time, they chose instead to stick with him, with the party and with party-aligned media, giving Trump, who apparently cares little about public policy or the conservati­ve movement, the ability to decide what counts as orthodoxy.

Given the legal trouble the former president has gotten himself into, being a “true conservati­ve” now includes a requiremen­t to defend Trump’s attempt to overthrow the 2020 election as well as his right to classified material.

Republican­s know that the weeks leading up to midterm elections aren’t a good time to pick a fight with the party leader, especially one who they believe won’t hesitate to turn against anyone who opposes him. That means the next opportunit­y to move away from Trump is probably after the November midterms. Until then, Republican­s are probably stuck with whatever he does that disrupts the party’s attempts to run coherent campaigns and focus voters on President Joe Biden’s weaknesses.

Nominating extremist candidates who perform badly in general elections has occasional­ly been costly for Republican­s. It’s getting much worse. To some extent this is a consequenc­e of having Trump around, but the former president’s support doesn’t carry that much clout.

Instead, the problem has been that the party simply doesn’t know how to protect itself from cranks and fraudsters. Republican­s lack an effective counterarg­ument against anyone who claims to be a true conservati­ve and denounces everyone else for being RINOS. So inexperien­ced candidates with unpopular views, such as Arizona Senate nominee Blake Masters, or Pennsylvan­ia gubernator­ial nominee Doug Mastriano, often get nominated — or they wind up dragging the eventual nominee so far from the mainstream that the nominee risks losing.

Democrats don’t always nominate moderates, and even healthy parties sometimes choose to embrace unpopular positions despite the potential electoral costs. But Republican­s too often act as if the only question of any relevance is which candidate is the purest conservati­ve. Relevant experience and appeal to independen­ts is either ignored or actually considered a flaw.

It isn’t clear how much the Supreme Court’s decision to end the constituti­onal right to abortions will cost Republican­s this fall. But it sure doesn’t appear to be helping. Republican legislatur­es are passing all sorts of uncompromi­sing bills in spite of increasing voter sympathy to abortion rights.

We could chalk up some of this to a normal willingnes­s to push through new policies even at the cost of future electoral loss. But Republican moves following the court ruling, in addition to the court’s decision itself, seem reckless. Republican presidents and senators haven’t been satisfied with solidly conservati­ve justices such as current Chief Justice John Roberts or former Justice Anthony Kennedy. Trump, in particular, used judicial nomination­s to secure the support of the hardest-line activists within the Republican coalition, and Republican senators eagerly went along, only to find that if you put extremists on the court you’re likely to get extreme decisions that put targets on the politician­s who supported them.

It’s still possible that Biden’s unpopulari­ty will swamp everything else once the majority of voters start paying attention. But it’s also possible that for perhaps the first time in modern U.S. history, the party out of power will manage to throw away an election that they stood to win.

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