Republicans always choose radicalization to energize their electoral base
Republicans always choose radicalization to energize their electoral base
Thomas Zimmer
Conservatives have long harnessed the extremist, far-right energies of their base to animate the party
Sat 22 Oct 2022 06.20 EDT
(
Guardian UK) In the days and weeks after the attack on the Capitol, Republican leaders publicly acknowledged Donald Trumps culpability. Last weeks January 6 hearings presented footage of House minority leader Kevin McCarthy declaring Trump should have immediately denounced the attack and Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell accusing Trump of ignoring his duty as president. It was a striking reminder that immediately after the insurrection, elected Republicans as well as some of Trumps allies in the rightwing media were rattled by what had happened, uncertain of how to continue.
But the moment quickly passed. January 6 obviously wasnt enough for Republicans in Congress to actually impeach or for conservatives to break with Trump in any meaningful way. Instead, they closed ranks and rallied behind Trump: Republicans first acquitted him, then they started obstructing every attempt to hold him accountable, and now a majority of GOP candidates are running on the big lie, denying the legitimacy of the 2020 election. The few who broke with Trump have been fully marginalized or even ostracized from the party. Republicans did not come to see January 6 as the end of the line, the outrageous conclusion of the Trumpian experiment they have come to see it as a blueprint: never concede an election, never accept defeat at the hands of what they see as a fundamentally un-American enemy.
Was there a viable alternative path after January 6? Was that road not taken ever as realistically an option as the statements by McConnell and McCarthy may suggest, at least at first sight? Im skeptical. I have no doubt that many Republicans, like McConnell himself, personally despise Trump for summoning a mob to attack the Capitol. They may consider Trump too crass, just as they probably arent entirely comfortable with the rise of Trump-endorsed white Christian nationalist extremists like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Doug Mastriano.
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The problem runs a lot deeper than Trump. It is crucial to grapple with the underlying ideas and dynamics that have animated the Republican partys path for a long time. They have led to a situation in which moments of brief uncertainty almost always result in a further radicalization of the Republican party and the right in general. What happened after the 2012 election defeat that shook conservatives to the core is an instructive example: the Republican National Committee famously released an autopsy report that called for moderation and outreach to traditionally marginalized groups. But instead, the GOP doubled down and went with Trumpism. ...............(more)
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/oct/22/republicans-january-6-trumpism-radicalization-voters