The Divide in the Republican Party

Republican Party Has Lost Its Way and Identity | Janice S. Ellis

Much has been made of the divisions in the Democratic Party with the fringe left making life difficult for Joe Biden.  But what of the dissatisfaction in Republican ranks with Donald Trump?  The number of non-endorsements grew beyond Larry Hogan of Maryland and Nikki Haley’s refusal to fall in line, and now includes Mike Pence’s rejection of Trump (watch below).  Biden and Trump must be some of the most detested candidates ever to be foisted on the American public.  2024 is proving to be an election of the abhorrent.

Biden is sliding off into senescence as he flails ever further left.  Trump can’t help being repellent.  Both parties and their candidates are pandering in ways that sacrifice the country’s fortunes.  Biden attaches himself to a toxic cultural revolution, works to bury the country in greenie central planning, is busy driving the economy into the ditch in a flurry of tax/spend/regulate, and in a bumbling incoherence that strives to rescue Hamas in ceasefires as it calls for its defeat.  Whew, what a cognitive mess.

Trump isn’t any more intelligible.  He’s quite prepared to unleash Putin on Europe after stopping aid to Ukraine.  He promises a “beautiful” settlement on abortion which can only mean more sanction of more death for the unborn.  He complains of Biden’s contributions to the national debt while he guarantees an enlargement of it.  He won’t touch entitlements; the two biggest – Social Security and Medicare – will soon be ballooning the debt to such an extent that servicing it, in times of high interest rates, will crowd out defense and most of the other normal functions of government.  Of course, the payback for all the borrowing will fall most grievously on the young and yet-to-born.  But who cares?  Right?  They don’t vote.  The irresponsibility slaps you in the face.

He’s quite happy to trundle down the failed road of protectionism, corporate welfare, and coerced unionization.  Welcome to the new “blue-collar” Republican Party, which is not much different from the “New Deal” Democratic Party, the party with the same combination of 1930’s policies that succeeded in turning a depression into The Great Depression.  The thought of that prospect makes Trump seem appealing, as appealing as the next hit of methadone.

Mike Pence is a throwback to a time when the Republican Party made sense.  Yep, some of that agenda didn’t cater to big business’s claim on the budgetary carcass, or big labor’s demand to rope workers to its chariot.  Free market economics isn’t simpatico with featherbedding or the ladling of undeserved benefits to groups for no other reason than feeding their government-fueled bigness.  Trump, though, is all-in with his tariffs and his groveling at union shops.

Pence represents the approach that gave us one of the longest, if not the longest, sustained period of economic growth.  For decades after Reagan, subsequent presidents were surfers riding the big wave.  Even a Democrat president, Bill Clinton, had to concede as much in his 1996 state of the union address, “The era of big government is over.”

Then, along comes the Obama and Biden Democrats to implement their hostility to success and resuscitate the cult of big government.  Then, along comes Trump to hitch Republican fortunes to the cult.  Big names in the Republican tent are keen to construct a welfare state for hopefully their newfound blue-collar constituency, and even to declare their conversion to unionization and dislike for right-to-work.  The outspoken Sen. Josh Hawley (R, Mo.) burnished his about-face by joining striking UAW workers recently in Wentzville, Mo., and announcing his opposition to any federal right-to-work legislation.  Heaven forbid that workers should not be forced into a self-serving, left-wing labor cartel.  Nixon’s 1971 remark that “we’re all Keynesians now” could be updated to “we’re all for closed shops now” for the now “populist” GOP.

Funny thing, none of this big government agenda ever really worked.  The illusion of success peaked in the 1950s when America’s foreign competitors were still clearing the rubble from WWII.  America was never bombed or invaded so much excess was tolerated in a constricted market without economic rivals.  Fat labor contracts and absurd work rules with much featherbedding larded American manufacturing and transportation.  Hawley is happy to bring it back, with the stagflation of the 1970s tagging along.

Pence is a living reminder of what worked.  There are a few people still breathing who don’t suffer from the amnesia.  But amnesia is in vogue.  Democrats remain hooked on the belief in a coterie of Harvard grads scattered in big government bureaus who will save us from ourselves, or, for some, Karl Marx’s scheme can be magically made to succeed.  Come to think of it, it might be less amnesia than the sheer stubbornness that comes with ignorance.

For Trump partisans, amnesia remains as the lone explanatory contender.  Either that or blatant opportunism of people who should know better.  That’s the divide within the party: those with amnesia and those like Pence.  Please watch Martha McCallum’s interview with Pence, about 5 minutes into it, for a reminder that there are people who remember Reaganomics.

RogerG

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