The House Divided

I’ve been making the point for a long time that the Republican Party is not really a political party. It’s a dumping ground for people that don’t fit into the Democratic Party for some reason. The groups that find themselves in the GOP don’t have a lot in common with one another. Many would prefer to be in the Democratic party, but circumstances make it impossible.

Romney famously ran on the “three legs of the GOP base.” That was economic conservatives, social conservatives and foreign policy hawks. That’s not a terrible formulation for a political party, but it is not based in reality. The so-called social conservatives, for example, are much more populist and localist than the economic conservatives can tolerate.

Similarly, the foreign policy hawks are not in line with the economic conservatives on a lot of things. The main reason people favor a tough line with the muzzies is so the muzzies will stay over in their countries. Many foreign policy hawks, like me for example, are OK with letting Afghanistan return to the 5th century. They should remain backward. Close down their airports, electric plants and water systems. Problem solved. That’s heresy with the economic conservatives.

Political parties in America have always been coalitions of divergent interests with one or two unifying items. From FDR to Jimmy Carter, the Democrats were Yankee elites running a coalition of ethnic groups, unions, southern populists and intellectuals. That’s given way to a party of Yankee elites running a coalition of fringe weirdos, blacks, immigrants, academic elites and their students. The Democrats are mostly the party of people who went to college and would have preferred to stay there.

The Republicans are not a coalition of anything now. If you are a Southern conservative, you have little in common with the conservative of the northeast. People in Massachusetts, for example, who call themselves conservative and vote Republican, are not religious and they are indifferent on the homos and abortion. Their leaders are often pro-abortion and gay marriage. Contrast that with the Democrats where everyone is violently in favor of abortion.

My formulation of the Republican elected officials is that one third wish they were Democrats, one third just like the easy life of elected office and the rest are genuine conservatives in the traditional meaning of the term. John Boehner, for example, would have been a fine Speaker in 1984, when the Democrats ran the House and tangled with Reagan over policy. Boehner would have been fine at building majorities to compromise on the small issues.

There’s something else. The Democrat Party is now a purely ideological party. This is a first in America. Europe has ideological parties, but American has never had them, at least ones that gain votes. The Democrats are now a party of the New Religion. You can’t win office as a Democrat being pro-life or if you are against homo marriage. You have to embrace anti-racism, multiculturalism and egalitarianism in order to have a place. I’ll note that all Democratic House members are open borders fanatics.

How a coalition party, especially a haphazard one, responds when faced with a an ideological party is debatable. The experience of Europe in the first third of the 20th century is not encouraging. It does appear that the House Republicans are so divided they cannot pick a speaker. No one dares say it, but the issues dividing the party are the old national questions, particularly immigration. The people running the party want open borders. The insurgents want national sovereignty. There is no room to compromise.

My guess is the people in charge will stay in charge. They will employ an age old strategy of backing a novus homo that they think will fail and embarrass the upstarts. Just in case, you can be sure they will work hard to make sure he does fail. They are playing the long game from the comfort of the inner party. Some of these people have been in DC so long, their GPS reads “thar be monsters” for the areas outside the Beltway.

The only whiff of good news in any of this is that I sense that the sovereignty issue is playing much better in the Northeast and Midwest than elsewhere in the country. The South is much more mildly opposed to immigration, simply due to the cultural arrangements and the long history with migrant farm workers. In the Northeast, the old Yankee paranoia and intolerance is showing up in the immigration debate.

If the GOP can evolve as a party to reflect the mild nationalism of lightly managed trade, constitutional liberty and regulated immigration, it can be a majority party that has appeal nationally. That will require something on the ball in the leadership positions, but all the incentives are pointing the wrong way now. A party riven with dissent ends up with the worst leaders of the various factions. The result are guys like Mike McCarthy who is as dumb as a goldfish.

We live in interesting times.

9 thoughts on “The House Divided

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  4. Whatever you say about the Republicans can equally be said over here for the Conservatives. You would think a party calling itself that might be conservative, but no! Perish the thought!

    The Tories have become middle of road with leftist sympathies, which seems to merely drive the usual lefties (aka Labour) even more leftward in a desire to be so utterly different from the Conservatives who have taken Labour’s traditional position. For example the Tories love the socialist NHS but to socialists they don’t love it nearly enough.

    Elections here are mostly “Do you want a little socialism or a lot more socialism with your European dictatorship?”

  5. My money is on change. The number of scalps taken continues to rise. What’s ironic is it would only have taken some effort to put a few points on the board. Instead the leadership of both houses continue to get stuffed in their lockers by a second rater.

  6. “Lightly managed trade, constitutional liberty … regulated immigration.” It takes ideology to understand the importance of these, and Republicans ain’t got ideology. Even when they win, they lose.

  7. The experience of Europe in the first third of the 20th century is not encouraging.

    You can say that again!! I’ve long maintained that the inevitable counterweight to the ideological party of the new religion is a cultural national socialist party.

    The old laissez-faire, individual-rights Right (the Burkean Right, as they might still say in poli sci classes) is as dead as disco, because it requires a strong, self-confident, openly Judeo-Christian culture that we haven’t had since the 60s… if not 1918. Going back there isn’t an option — too many people are on unemployment, addicted to iCrap, or both — but cultural marxism can be defeated with strong cultural leadership at the top. I know you read the “alt-right.” Those dudes sound like Hendrik Verwoerd, and their ideal state sounds a lot like his — socialism for the Boers, a police state for the blacks.

    It’s been done before, I guess I’m saying, and with great success. The ideas are still alive and kicking; combined with the right culture — the right salesman — such a party could sweep up just about anybody who has ever felt uncomfortable around a blue-haired, nose-ringed vegan. It’d be enough to win one election, anyway…. and one election is all they’d need.

  8. jfmoris, that is section 8 housing at work. Soon to bloom in communities across the land, in places you would never expect.

  9. “The South is much more mildly opposed to immigration”. Any area that has a lot of blacks, is not so dismayed at the idea of replacing them with hispanics. Too bad for other areas that the blacks move to.

    Has anyone else noticed a lot of new apartments being built in “low black” areas, and an increase in black people? Around here, it’s like there’s a gold rush, what with all the new apartments being slapped up. I hope it’s more the market responding to people who want to flee the cities, and not slumlords building up in response to Obama’s “spread the misery” HUD directives.

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