In 1840 the Whig
Party elected its first president, William Henry Harrison. There
would be three Whig presidents in all. By 1856 the party was
defunct. Will the Republican Party follow them into oblivion?
Harrison- First Whig President |
Both the Whigs and
the Republicans were formed in response to moral issues. The Whigs
grew, at least in part, out of a revulsion with the brutal Indian
suppression policies of the populist Democrat, Andrew Jackson. They
also wanted to secure minority rights in the face of popular voting
majorities. In 1852 the party split over objection to the extension
of slavery into the western territories, failing to renominate its
own president, Millard Fillmore. The Republican Party was born to
take its place and emerged with the election of Abraham Lincoln, who
went on to become the Great Emancipator, America's greatest president
in the opinion of most historians.
Millard Fillmore- the last Whig |
Whatever the parties
were called in America's persistent two-party system, one usually
worked to protect the interests of the well-off establishment while
the other worked on behalf of the less-well-off. There were other
pairings of opposed elements, such as north-south, central government
vs. states' rights, agriculture vs manufacturing, liberal vs
conservative. The tactics, causes and domains of the parties have
shifted over time, as in the case of the Democratic solid south
becoming the Republican solid south when LBJ enacted civil rights
legislation.
The Great Emancipator |
Whigs and
Republicans have both represented professional and business interests
but central to the Whigs' platform was a policy of tariffs to
stimulate manufacturing. They also advocated free public schools to
develop an educated and informed citizenry. After the Republicans
replaced the Whigs as, in Bill Moyers' clever redefinition of GOP,
the Guardians Of Privilege, they also gave the country its greatest
trust-busting president ever in Teddy Roosevelt. GOP in those days
was shorthand for Grand Old Party.
The Great Trust Buster |
In recent years, the
Republican Party has stood the policy of fostering industry,
education and competition on its head. Today's GOP subsidizes the
outsourcing of jobs, cuts funds for education while making giveawaysof public funds to billionaire professional sports team owners, and
eliminates regulations against monopoly producing mergers.
At present, the GOP
is facing a split, which may threaten its very existence, between its
true constituency, the oligarchs that finance it, and its blue state
voter base. Both parties have traditionally been made up of strange
and seemingly incompatible groups but this time the coalition just
may come apart, as in the Whigs' demise. While the party insiders
are mostly denizens of the tonier precincts of NYC and Washington DC,
the voting base is largely made up of white voters in the poorer
states of the south and west. A recent study has shown that the
white population with a high school education or less is undergoing
a sudden drop in life expectancy. The mortality rate has taken a
sharp upturn due largely to effects of alcoholism, drug addiction and
suicide. These people have been persuaded for decades to vote
against their own economic interests but if they keep dying off or
becoming inert prematurely, no amount of gerrymandering may be enough
to maintain GOP control. The ultra-right corporate takeover of the
major media has been brilliant but the average viewer of the major
propaganda outlet, Fox News, is in his sixties and so time is not on
their side. No matter how much the NYT uncritically publishes
handouts from the State Dept and the DOD, and the Washington Post
publishes op-ed from discredited neocons promoting military solutions
to everything, people are just not reading newspapers very much any
more. In the past, immigrants climbing the social ladder into the
middle class have often abandoned the Democrat party to vote
Republican alongside their new suburban neighbors. With social
mobility now virtually all downward, GOP leaders will have little
left to work with except racial and ethnic animus. Divide and
conquer! A new influx of refugees should help them there but how far
can they work that theme?
Democrats have a
deep divide of their own between corporatist and populist wings but
only time will tell if they can be reconciled. Perhaps the corporate
wings of the Republican and Democratic Parties could merge as a newly
minted Democratic Republican Party. Some of us suspect that this
happened a while back but simply hasn't been formally announced.
Perhaps the announcement will follow the vote on the democracy-ending TPP. Hillary Clinton may be poised to become, like Lincoln, the
first president of a newly formed party.
The Republican
division has come out in the presidential debates over the issue of
immigration reform, with half the candidates taking a harsh public
stance against illegal immigrants, while the other half says it wants
to find a way to accommodate them. While hypocrisy has always
greased the gears of society, this split reflects a fundamental
division in the ranks. The voting base doesn't want to compete with
illegal immigrant labor. The funding base wants the cheap labor that
only only illegal immigrants can furnish. It has nothing to do with
nationality or ethnicity and everything to do with legal status.
Illegal labor, foreign labor, third world labor, prison labor, slave
labor; it's all good, that is, it's cheap! The GOP wants and needs
the Hispanic vote so some, at least, are trying to seem concerned.
After all, the Hispanic birth rate is the only thing that keeps the
national birth rate from going below replacement level. At the same
time, Hispanic voters have the biggest stake in avoiding competition
with illegals.
America's two party
polarity could better be described as the opposition of left and
right but more often it is described as the divide between liberal
and conservative. Since Reagan, the GOP has tried to turn “liberal”
into an unflattering epithet. They've had some success, leading
Democrats to shy away from “liberal” and to identify themselves
with the more presumptuous term “progressive”. Republicans
unanimously define themselves as “conservative”. What, if
anything, does conservative mean? The word starts with conserve,
suggesting a will to conserve something. Could be a lot of things;
health, standard of living, sense of security, life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness, peace, the infrastructure, the air, the water,
the environment, the planet, all are things that come to mind,
although none of these things ever seems to rate mention at meetings
of the GOP. Conservative also suggests a caution about change and
a tendency to slow the pace of change. Change may be good or it may
be bad but it is an inevitable element of life. A common
distinction is made between social conservatives and fiscal
conservatives. Social issues are almost all sex-related matters,
sometimes interwoven with civil rights issues and interpretations of
the Constitution, while fiscal concerns are largely about debt and
taxation. At the moment the American population consists of four
large groups of people who are either conservative on both social and
fiscal issues, on one but not the other, or on neither.
In the midst of the
over-long presidential campaign, where does the vast assemblage of
GOP candidates for president stand with regard to the public on
conservative issues? Social issues have shifted quickly in the
United States. The sexual revolution of the 60's has left the
country a very different place than it was half a century ago. The
South was fully segregated by race in the 50's and that too has
changed even if racism persists. The status and rights of women have
evolved, perhaps more by changing conditions than by political
effort. In 1993 the implementation of “don't ask, don't tell” in
the military was seen as a huge progressive step for the rights of
homosexuals. It is now considered a landmark of discrimination and
the push for gay rights has led to widespread acceptance of same sex
marriage, something unimaginable just two or three decades ago.
Abortion was almost universally illegal in the US until the Supreme
Court decided it was a constitutional right in 1973. Many of these
changes have been rapid but most are accepted by the majority of the
population. Still, not everyone is happy with all these changes so
we can assume that there will continue to be be a political party
representing people with such concerns. The battles over social
issues are real, with significant numbers of people on each side.
What about the current crop of Republican candidates?
Most of these
conservative candidates are sufficiently resistant to social change
to satisfy the voting base. Where there is deviation from
conservatively correct dogma, it is seldom a product of creeping
liberalism. Three candidates recently attended a meeting of the National Religious Liberties Conference whose leader, on the same
weekend, made the case for rounding up and killing all homosexuals.
Do such policies qualify as conservative? Many good people oppose
abortion but does the tacit approval of the murder of people running
abortion clinics qualify as conservative? Slowing the pace of social
change may be conservative but what about the radical and violent
return to an era that probably never existed? Conservative or
radical reactionary?
"Bad science! Bad science!" |
Is being
anti-science conservative? In 1633 Galileo Galilei was tried and
convicted by the Inquisition for promoting the Copernican theory of
the universe, in which the earth revolves around the sun. Surely,
the Inquisition could be considered conservative in its time. Does
it make sense 382 years later to consider politicians holding views
similar of those of the Inquisition to be conservative? Was the
space exploration program cut back due to budget constraints or by
concerns of heresy? Does Jim Inhofe count as a conservative? What
about the majority of GOP candidates who follow his lead in bashing
science? The English language seems to be failing us here.
Greatest friend of the 1% ever |
Most establishment
Republicans don't really give a damn about social issues, except as a
tool to fire up the base. Deep down, it's all about economics, often
camouflaged as fiscal conservatism. If fiscal conservatism is about
balanced budgets and keeping spending in line with income, how many
of the dozen or more GOP candidates could rationally be called fiscal
conservatives? One! While he may be way out there in right field on
many domestic issues, Rand Paul is the only GOP candidate who has any
reasonable claim to being called a fiscal conservative. He has even
called out his colleagues asking: Is it really conservative to
advocate unlimited military spending without paying for it when our
military budget is already larger than the rest of the world's
together? Paul is also the only Republican candidate who has ever
opposed a war that the US has initiated. Since Ronald Reagan,
Republican Administrations have consistently run up record deficits.
“Tax and spend” liberal Bill Clinton produced a surplus, which
was quickly eliminated by “conservative” George W. Bush by
starting wars financed by deficit spending. So much for fiscal
conservatives. They have perpetrated a monster hoax for years. All
these Republicans holler about deficits but they keep making them
bigger through corporate welfare, tax breaks for their rich sponsors
and blowing ever more money on the insatiable military industrial
complex. All the candidates seem to have a “tax plan”. Rand
Paul isn't immune from this. In every case, these plans would drive
the country deeper in debt while trashing its public resources,
accelerating the decline of the middle class and further reducing the
prospects of the poorer classes, into which the former middle class
is sliding.
New Leadership. Conservative enough? |
Some of the GOP base
is angry and their anger lashes out in all directions, usually
misplaced. Such people are referred to as the Tea Party. They may
eventually morph into a separate party, something like the
Know-Nothings at an earlier troubled time in our history, but they
have little in common with the Wall Street insiders and the Karl
Roves of the world, who have been using them badly.
The party insiders
are getting worried that outsider candidates such as Donald Trump and
Ben Carson are still leading the polls, fearing that they may lead
the party into an electoral debacle, or worse, that if elected they
will drive the country to ruin faster than the insiders' plan called
for. The total collapse isn't supposed to come before the sanctuaries of the
oligarchy are fully stocked, armed and fortified. Rumors have even
surfaced of a plan to draft Mitt Romney. The group of GOP candidates
has been frequently compared to a clown car.
Having spent the early
and late portions of my career working on zoos, I'm inclined to view
the spectacle as something you'd see in a zoo. A large gorilla
roaring and pounding his chest, surrounded by smaller, nastier,
screeching monkeys and cold blooded, beady-eyed reptiles with darting
tongues. There are also some sloths and aardvark types waiting to be
prodded into action but alas, there are no lions or tigers or Teddies
in this crowd. Will their prayers be answered with an ark to save
them from the coming deluge?
1 comment:
Interesting and brilliant Robert! There may be some hope yet for our country. I just watched Bernie Sanders speak at Georgetown Univ. Here's the link click on the line at the bottom of the video to start the video at 1:08 to get past the other stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNR-ik3hohQ
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