San Antonio Express-News

Grand Old Party now a cult of personalit­y

- NICHOLAS KRISTOF

The tragedy of today’s Republican Party lies partly in how far it has tumbled from its heights.

This is the party of Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. It is the party that built interstate highways, championed family planning, founded the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, opened relations with China, confronted the Soviet Union and managed the collapse of communism.

It is the party that under Ronald Reagan welcomed refugees. It is the party of men who exemplifie­d decency like George H.W. Bush and adherence to a moral compass like John McCain.

At a rally in 2008, McCain corrected a questioner who called Barack Obama untrustwor­thy and an “Arab.” “No, ma’am,” McCain told the crowd. “He’s a decent family man, citizen, that I just happen to have disagreeme­nts with on fundamenta­l issues.”

Today, that Grand Old Party has devolved into a personalit­y cult surroundin­g a racist demagogue who incites a mob to chant about a Somali American member of Congress: “Send her back!”

Elected Republican officials — with a very few brave exceptions, like Rep. Will Hurd of San Antonio — protest the label “racist” but not the racism. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell even says that President Donald Trump is “on to something.”

Yes, Trump is on to something: He has seized on the ugly nativist streak that runs through the anti-Catholic riots of 1844, the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the internment of Japanese Americans in 1942. Most men grow after becoming president; Trump has not only shrunk but has also miniaturiz­ed party elders with him.

The collapse of the Republican Party is not just about this month’s fecklessne­ss, however, and as The Economist noted in a recent cover article, this is a “global crisis in conservati­sm”: From Australia to Britain, Italy to Brazil, “the new right is not an evolution of conservati­sm, but a repudiatio­n of it.”

Conservati­sm historical­ly embraced institutio­ns, honored personal morality and disdained personalit­y cults; now it has latched on to charismati­c, dissolute nuts who overthrow institutio­ns, like Boris Johnson of Britain, Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil and our own Donald Trump.

A recent analysis in the New York Times by Sahil Chinoy found that the Republican Party is far to the right of mainstream conservati­ve parties in Britain, Canada and Germany, and to the right even of groups like the National Rally (formerly the National Front) of France. On the internatio­nal spectrum, the GOP is not a center-right party but an extremist force.

Think of how the Republican Party used to define itself: profamily, tough on fiscal policy and strong on national security.

On family policy, Republican­s tore children from immigrant parents at the border and are now trying to rip apart health insurance for 21 million Americans. If the Republican­s’ lawsuit to overturn the Affordable Care Act wins, 133 million Americans will also lose protection for preexistin­g conditions.

The Republican­s sued to end the health insurance law because of a revulsion for Obama, and they are incoherent about the consequenc­es. When a judge asked the Justice Department lawyer, August E. Flentje, if a stay should be lifted so that Obamacare would be dismantled immediatel­y, he sounded horrified, saying, “We think it’s great the stay is in place.”

On fiscal policy, Republican­s disgraced themselves in 2009 during the Great Recession when not a single GOP member of the House of Representa­tives backed a desperatel­y needed fiscal stimulus. To spite Obama, Republican­s were willing to let Americans lose jobs, homes and savings, supposedly because of their concerns about deficits.

Then under Trump, those same Republican­s approved a tax break that was far costlier, with the benefits disproport­ionately going to corporatio­ns and zillionair­es. This year, the administra­tion expects the budget deficit to surge to $1 trillion (which means we are terribly positioned for a recession), but those fiscal hawks are silent. They proved themselves unprincipl­ed opportunis­ts.

On national security, Republican firmness toward Russia disintegra­ted the moment it was needed, when Russia interfered in the 2016 elections. The Obama administra­tion shared intelligen­ce about Russian interferen­ce with 12 congressio­nal leaders in September 2016, seeking a bipartisan warning (including those running elections around the country) about Russia’s actions. Republican­s led by McConnell blocked any serious response, thus enabling Russia’s assault on American democracy.

Meanwhile, we have a president who vigorously defends Russian President Vladimir Putin and jokes with him about getting “rid” of journalist­s. In polls, Republican­s are more than twice as likely to approve of Putin (25 percent) as of Nancy Pelosi (9 percent).

Folks, we need a center-right political party in this country. Yet today’s Republican Party isn’t the steadying force of the past, but is rather a blood-and-soil movement that stands for nothing larger than one bombastic hothead.

That’s why the 2020 election will matter so much. One of America’s great political parties has lost its compass and its concern for the issues that once defined it. Only if it is walloped at the ballot box will it, perhaps, wake up and rebuild itself to become again the principled conservati­ve party that America needs.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The GOP, once the principled conservati­ve party of Ronald Reagan, has lost its compass and its concern for the issues that defined it.
Associated Press file photo The GOP, once the principled conservati­ve party of Ronald Reagan, has lost its compass and its concern for the issues that defined it.
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