Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Grand White Party vs. Grand Middle Party – Slate Magazine

There is no going back to Reagan-era Republicanism.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Update, Aug. 18, 2017, at 2 p.m.: This article has been updated to reflect news of Steve Bannons departure from the White House.

Shortly before Steve Bannon was booted from the White House, we caught a glimpse of his contradictory nature. In an interview with left-wing labor journalist Robert Kuttner, Bannon insists he is a class warrior who wants nothing more than to forge a pan-ethnic coalition of working-class economic nationalists that can defeat the smug globalists of Wall Street and Silicon Valley. In conversations with his friends in the White House, meanwhile, he describes Donald Trumps equivocating response to white-supremacist terrorism in Charlottesville as a shrewd way to fire up the presidents base. Ben Smith of Buzzfeed has drawn out the contradictions between these two Bannonisms in a recent column, making the point that theres no rational way to reconcile them. Hes right.

But what would happen if we teased apart the seemingly disparate approaches championed by Trumps erstwhile chief strategist? The answer is that wed get two entirely different visions for the Republican future.

Theres one point on which both Bannons agree, which is that there is no going back to Reagan-era Republicanism. The basic formula for the Grand Reagan Party is that we must keep fighting for tax cuts for the rich (because they create jobs), shrinking the welfare state (because public aid breeds dependency), cutting Social Security benefits for those under 55 (because entitlements are out of control), boosting military spending (because the world is a dangerous place), and increasing immigration levels (because we love the huddled masses yearning to breathe free and we need cut-rate farmworkers and engineers). It is vitally important that we balance the budget, Reagan Republicans believe, which is why we must slash Medicaid spending. But its also crucial that we cut taxes, which will unleash entrepreneurs, spark an economic boom, and lift all boats.

As much as Jeff Flake might long for this kind of neo-Reaganism, Trumpunder the influence of the svengali-like Bannonhas demonstrated that GOP voters have mostly moved on from it. That leaves us with two other possibilities, each of which reflects a different brand of Bannonism.

The first would be a Republican Party rooted more firmly in white identity politics. Imagine Republicans winning not by making gains among non-white voters but rather by doing even better among whites. If a future Republican presidential candidate could match Trumps numbers among non-college-educated white voters and Romneys numbers among college-educated whites, shed be hard to beat. For this to work for the GOP, the whole map would need to look like the Deep South, where Republicans routinely win 70 percent or more of the white vote.

What would be the ideological orientation of a Grand White Party? For one thing, the GWP would want to curb non-white immigration, to put the brakes on Americas fast-moving demographic transformation. And it would take a softer line on entitlement spending, not least because older Americans are a disproportionately white, Republican-leaning constituency. On foreign policy matters, the Grand White Party would be more skeptical of foreign intervention, seeing it as a waste of money and time.

A Grand Middle Party could step into the populist void a more 1 percent-ish Democratic Party leaves behind.

Could a Grand White Party succeed? Its possible, at least for a little while. If Democrats campaign on expanding means-tested benefits and raising taxes on high earners, a Grand White Party could argue that Democrats are in effect transferring resources from well-off white families to poor non-white families. If Democrats at the state and local level push desegregation efforts that would bring poor non-white families into suburban neighborhoods currently dominated by well-off white families, a Grand White Party would push back aggressively.

One challenge for a Grand White Party is that college-educated whites and non-college-educated whites often have clashing sensibilities and political priorities. To really ramp up support among college-educated whites, the Grand White Party might have to take stances on social issues that non-college-educated whites would find alienating. On the other hand, the fact that so many evangelical Republicans have rallied behind thrice-married serial groper Donald Trump might mean that paeans to traditional morality have faded in importance.

There is another challenge involved in building a Grand White Party, which is that many white voters would be uncomfortable seeing themselves as part of a whites-only party, so theyd need the party to at least pay lip service to being more racially inclusive. You could argue that this is where Republicans find themselves right now.

What will happen to a Grand White Party as the Latino and Asian electorates continue to expand at a rapid rate? One possibility is that Latino and Asian identities will grow more rigid and racialized, and that Latino/white and Latino/Asian conflicts will intensify. Under these circumstances, the white electorate might shrink, but a combative Grand White Party might compensate by securing a still higher share of embattled white voters. Its also possible that a growing number of Latinos and Asians might come to identify as white, thanks to intermarriage and assimilation. Such a development would shore up an otherwise shrinking white electorate.

There is another alternative for the GOP, though, one that resonates with the Bannonism we saw in his conversation with Kuttner. This version of Republicanismthe Grand Middle Partywould build on a longer-term development, which is that while Democrats increasingly represent affluent college-educated professionals and the non-white working class, Republicans are increasingly the party of the white middle class. A Grand Middle Party would build on this white middle-class base by incorporating a larger number of Latino, Asian, and black middle-class voters.

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To do this, however, Republicans would have to embrace a radically different approach to domestic policy. A Grand Middle Party would be more skeptical of mass less-skilled immigration than a Grand Reagan Party. Unlike the Grand White Party, however, it would couch its skepticism in terms of its commitment to helping Americans of all colors and creeds, including lawful working-class immigrants and their children. The goal of a Grand Middle Party immigration policy would be to recruit skilled immigrants who can help shrink Americas poverty problem by paying the taxes we need to finance schools and social programs.

Instead of fighting for tax cuts on the rich, a Grand Middle Party would take a more populist approach. One idea would be to exempt most middle-income families from federal income taxes and replace the lost revenue with a broad-based consumption tax, like those used in Canada and Australia. While a Grand Middle Party would fight measures such as an unconditional basic income that have gained favor on the left, it would embrace work-friendly programs like wage insurance, subsidized apprenticeships and summer jobs, and paid-leave benefits for working mothers, the latter of which is an idea backed by Donald Trump of all people.

If these policies sound like ideas Bill Clinton might have championed, youre onto something. If the most recent Democratic primaries have taught us anything, its that the Democratic Party has changed since the 1990s. On the one hand, younger Democrats have moved sharply to the left, especially on cultural issues. On the other hand, in the post-Trump era, Democrats are consolidating support among members of the cosmopolitan business elite, who tend to find Trumpism repellent. As affluent voters join the Democratic coalition, its possible that the party will grow more averse to old-school economic populism. A Grand Middle Party could step into the populist void a more 1 percent-ish Democratic Party leaves behind.

As much as Steve Bannon claims to want something like a Grand Middle Party, he and Trump have been adhering almost exclusively to the Grand White Party playbook, with little success. The debate in todays GOP is almost exclusively between those who favor a Grand Reagan Party and a Grand White Party. If something like a Grand Middle Party is ever going to emerge, it seems, it will be after Trump fades from the political scene.

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Grand White Party vs. Grand Middle Party - Slate Magazine

What establishment Republicans think about Trump’s tirade – Politico

Mitch McConnell's former chief of staff Josh Holmes breaks down the mindset of the establishment GOP. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

SIREN -- THE NEW CIVIL WAR: INSIDE THE MINDS OF TOP ESTABLISHMENT REPUBLICANS -- FROM JOSH HOLMES, the former chief of staff to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the president of Cavalry: If you took a time machine from ten years ago and arrived this week you would be forgiven for assuming Donald Trump was elected president as a Democrat on a platform of the south will rise again!

Trump is using the precious capital of the bully pulpit to talk about confederate monuments in between savage attacks on fellow Republicans. Just think about that. Not tax reform. Not repeal and replace. Not North Korean nuclear capabilities. No focused critiques on extremely vulnerable Democrats who have opposed him at every possible turn.

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The reality is that every time he attacks a Republican he invites another member in good standing and another segment of the Republican party to abandon him. When youre eight months in and Republicans are all you have left, chipping away at the remaining few is a helluva strategy. The outpouring of critiques from within the GOP about the Presidents handling of Charlottesville could serve as a wake up call for the Administration, but if not, it could also be a Republican Party that begins to reassert an identity without Donald Trump.

WHAT JOSH IS TALKING ABOUT -- @realDonaldTrump: Great to see that Dr. Kelli Ward is running against Flake Jeff Flake, who is WEAK on borders, crime and a non-factor in Senate. He's toxic! Sad to see the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful statues and monuments. You........can't change history, but you can learn from it. Robert E Lee, Stonewall Jackson - whos next, Washington, Jefferson? So foolish! Also......the beauty that is being taken out of our cities, towns and parks will be greatly missed and never able to be comparably replaced!

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ITS NOT SURPRISING that Trump doesnt want Flake to be reelected -- he has been vocally opposed to the president, his behavior and some of his policies. This is just the latest back-and-forth between the two in the last month. But calling for an incumbent senators head from your own party is unprecedented. Flake has good relationships with his Senate colleagues and is a reliable Republican vote for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. This type of intraparty pissing match in public is the exact type of thing McConnell hates. Expect Republican senators to link arms and back Flake.

-- SENATE DEMOCRATS will love this. Its like a free gift. It distracts the GOP and could force McConnell and other outside groups to spend millions of dollars in a costly primary tying up money that could be used elsewhere.

-- @AliABCNews: The NRSC unequivocally supports Senator Flake in his reelection bid. NRSC Chairman @SenCoryGardner @SenJohnMcCain: .@JeffFlake is a principled legislator & always does what's right for the people of #AZ. Our state needs his leadership now more than ever.

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What establishment Republicans think about Trump's tirade - Politico

Republicans in Congress May Be Stuck in a Relationship With Trump – New York Times

If Republicans want to be in the majority, its not a question of sticking from Trump, its a question of accomplishing things, Representative Tom Cole, Republican of Oklahoma, said in a phone interview, driving away from a town hall-style forum this week in Ada, Okla. And most of those things require a presidential signature.

By the time Mr. Cole hung up, Mr. Trump had reverted to blaming both sides for the violence last weekend in Charlottesville, Va.

The remarkable exchange with reporters at Mr. Trumps Manhattan tower has renewed pleas, from corners of both major parties, for Republicans to break with the president in a more permanent way.

And Mr. Trump seems to be all but daring them, using his ritual Twitter unburdening on Thursday morning to lash out at two Republican senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina (publicity seeking) and Jeff Flake of Arizona (Flake Jeff Flake) who have criticized his recent leadership.

There is no doubt that Republicans have collectively amended their approach to the Trump problem in recent months, at least slightly: Finger-wagging counter-tweets and one-off statements of disapproval have often supplanted willful public ignorance. (Many had long retained a habit of telling reporters they had not seen the presidents latest objectionable flourish, no matter how ubiquitous.)

But it is not clear what a meaningful, sustainable divorce from Mr. Trump could even look like.

The most extreme remedies, like impeachment, remain nonstarters in Republican circles. The party has likewise declined to embrace any formalized censure against the president, an option pushed Wednesday by House Democrats though last months sanctions on Russia, passed against the administrations wishes, were a notable bit of bipartisan defiance.

Among Republicans, though, the next steps are complicated by the presidents ramshackle legislative strategy: The White House has effectively outsourced its agenda to its partners in Congress.

Abandoning Mr. Trump is abandoning themselves.

Are Republicans to set aside plans to overhaul the tax code, a party priority long before Mr. Trump arrived? Should they really refuse to consider the presidents broadly conservative nominees?

At least some have arrived at a disquieting conclusion: It is time for the party to dream small, for now anyway.

We cant get an agenda through, Mr. Flake said in an interview on Wednesday, noting the 60-vote threshold for most major legislation. The notion youre going to get all the Republicans, let alone any Democrats, to agree given his standing in the polls and when hes making these kinds of statements is just absurd.

Mr. Flake called it laughable to think that the Republicans signature effort, repealing the Affordable Care Act, could be revived successfully in this political moment.

The most striking appraisal came on Thursday from Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee and a frequent administration ally this year. He said that Mr. Trump had not demonstrated that he understands the character of this nation.

I do think there need to be some radical changes, Mr. Corker told reporters back home. The president has not yet been able to demonstrate the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to demonstrate in order to be successful.

Still, with few exceptions, most Republicans have appeared inclined to slog on.

A Gallup poll this week placed Mr. Trumps approval among Republicans in the high 70s a comedown from his postelection standing but still a large majority to consider, especially for lawmakers in safe districts whose most serious electoral threats often come in a primary election.

The Charlottesville episode has made plain how desperate Republicans are for Mr. Trump to steady himself.

You tell me what he needs to say so we can move beyond this, Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin asked of reporters in his home state.

Your words are dividing Americans, not healing them, Mr. Graham said of the president on Wednesday, two days after issuing an instant backslap on Twitter Well done Mr. President when Mr. Trump gritted through the more explicit denunciation of white supremacists that he seemed to regret hours later.

Some Republicans have taken care to avoid using Mr. Trumps name even as they back away from his remarks, using we as a sort of euphemism for the president they have in mind.

We can have no tolerance for an ideology of racial hatred, Mr. McConnell said in a statement on Wednesday.

We must be clear, Speaker Paul D. Ryan said Tuesday on Twitter. White supremacy is repulsive.

Democrats appear eager to convince voters that Mr. Trumps character and his partys agenda cannot be disentangled. With an eye toward next years midterm elections, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is already pressing the argument that House Republicans have helped pave the way for President Trumps racially charged presidency.

But it is legislative failure, more than any connection to Mr. Trump, that Republicans seem to view as the more menacing electoral iceberg.

House members are not afforded the luxury of the Senates six-year terms, which supply a longer runway for congressional accomplishment and can embolden some in the upper chamber to defy Mr. Trump more freely.

In the Senate, most of those guys arent up next cycle, said Mr. Cole, the Oklahoma congressman and a former chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee. Its easier to break when your names not on the ballot.

The partys priority, he said, must be to move legislation on the big three: health care, taxes and infrastructure.

If we get to the end of the year and we havent done any of the big three, then you worry about political trouble, he said.

From many sides.

Jonathan Martin contributed reporting from Birmingham, Ala.

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Republicans in Congress May Be Stuck in a Relationship With Trump - New York Times

Deepening GOP split, Trump attacks Republican senators Graham, Flake as ‘publicity-seeking,’ ‘toxic’ – Washington Post

Trump called out Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R- S.C.) on Aug. 17 for their criticism of his leadership. Here are 4 other politicians Trump has targeted on Twitter. (Elyse Samuels/The Washington Post)

President Trump went on the offensive Thursday against two Republican senators, attacking them for their recent criticisms of his divisive governing style and response to the violence in Charlottesville.

In a morning tweetstorm, Trump lambasted Sens. Lindsey O. Graham (S.C.) and Jeff Flake (Ariz.), calling Graham publicity-seeking and Flake toxic and endorsing a primary challenger to Flake in his reelection bid next year. Flake recently published a book that was highly critical of Trump.

Trump appeared to throw his support behind former Arizona state senator Kelli Ward, whois already mounting a primary challenge against Flake.

Flake wrote in his book that Republicans abandoned their principles in the face of Trump's unorthodox campaign and surrendered to the politics of anger. The party gave in to the belief that riling up the base can make up for failed attempts to broaden the electorate, Flake wrote in Conscience of a Conservative: A Rejection of Destructive Politics and a Return to Principle. These are the spasms of a dying party.

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) says the Republican president in the White House is not displaying the conservatism his party should be embracing. In his new book, "Conscience of a Conservative," Flake says populism and protectionism are as threatening to the GOP now as the New Deal was in 1960. (Dalton Bennett,Kate Woodsome/The Washington Post)

Ward is an osteopathic physician who unsuccessfully challenged Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) in 2016, using the senator's advanced age against him. This time, Ward is hoping to use Flake's opposition to Trump to her advantage.

Jeff Flake has been unable to effectively serve the people of Arizona. Thats the big story, she said in an interview last week. Thats why he has such dismal job approval ratings. Hes been there almost 20 years and has accomplished really nothing. His values dont align with his constituents and its time for him to be sent back home and send somebody to Washington, D.C. who can accomplish the America First agenda that the president put forth but that the American people embraced across this entire country.

Ward said that she's especially upset with Flake's recent words and actions on health care and taxes even though he voted for the GOP health-care bill and is supportive of attempts to overhaul the tax code.

So where has Flake gone wrong?

On taxes, he's already come out with his opposition, Ward claimed. Rather than saying 'Im looking forward to what Donald Trump puts forward so that we can accomplish the goal of lowering taxes across the board and making sure that our American economy thrives,' he puts a negative spin on it from the beginning.

And on health care, she said she's upset with his behavior I'll call it his behavior on Obamacare.

When the bill was over in the House, Jeff Flake was over in the Senate telling reporters that there just was no appetite for full repeal of Obamacare in the Senate. He was whispering to his donors in the hospital corporations and the insurance industry not to worry.

Ward specifically cited a Washington Post story from May that included Flake telling constituents that he had a hard time believing that the Senate would vote to pass health-care legislation before the August recess.

Flake's campaign spokesman responded in a statement, You don't serve Arizona by cutting backroom deals in Washington, D.C. That's why Senator Flake will always fight for the people of our state.

McCain tweeted a defense of Flake.

Trump also slammed Graham, who was among the Republicans who criticized Trump for failing to offer a full-throated condemnation of the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville. The president waited two days before denouncing the neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan groups that organized the Unite the Right event, only to reverse course Tuesday to again blame both sides for the violence that left a counterprotester, Heather Heyer, dead. Two police officers also died in a helicopter crash.

[Trumps isolation grows in the wake of Charlottesville]

In going after Graham, Trump suggested the senator, who also ran for president in 2016, was still smarting from his loss to Trump in the Republican primaries.

Graham responded with a statement in which he said Trump's handling of the Charlottesville violence was being praised by some of the most racist and hate-filled individuals and groups in our country. For the sake of our Nation as our President please fix this. History is watching us all.

Trump's tweets made clear that the president is willing to challenge fellow Republican lawmakers and potentially imperil their reelection chances if they criticize him. The GOP holds a narrow 52-48 margin in the Senate, though most political analysts say it will be difficult for Democrats to win back the chambers in 2018 because ofthe election map favoring Republicans.

But Trump also needs to maintain party loyalty to help pass his legislative agenda, including upcoming efforts at tax revision and, perhaps, infrastructure. McCain, for example, cast a crucial vote against the GOP's effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, prompting Trump to attack him repeatedly including yet again on Tuesday during his heated news conference in New York.

President Trump's relationship with Congress has become more and more strained as he struggles to find legislative wins. Now he's going after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), a key leader in his own party. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)

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Deepening GOP split, Trump attacks Republican senators Graham, Flake as 'publicity-seeking,' 'toxic' - Washington Post

Republicans are even avoiding Fox News when asked to talk about Trump and Charlottesville – Washington Post

After President Trump's rhetoric on the Charlottesville violence inflamed more criticism, many Republicans stayed silent. A handful criticized Trump directly while some issued broad statements against racism, but very few came to Trump's defense. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)

Congress is in recess, but Republicans are in hiding, apparently unsure how to answer questions about President Trump's response to last weekend's violence in Charlottesville and unwilling to try.

We invited every single Republican senator on this program tonight all 52, Chuck Todd said on MSNBC's MTP Daily on Wednesday. We asked roughly a dozen House Republicans, including a bunch of committee chairs, and we asked roughly a half dozen former Republican elected officials, and none of them agreed to discuss this issue with us today.

That's about 70 rejections altogether, and other news anchors had the same experience on Wednesday even on Fox News.

Our booking team and they're good reached out to Republicans of all stripes across the country today, Shepard Smith told his viewers. Let's be honest: Republicans often don't really mind coming on Fox News Channel. We couldn't get anyone to come and defend him here. Because we thought, in balance, someone should do that. We worked very hard at it throughout the day, and we were unsuccessful.

Trump a day earlier had doubled down on his position that both sides white supremacists and counterprotesters were responsible for the violence, and again seemed to draw a moral equivalence between the groups.

On CNN, Wolf Blitzer and Kate Bolduan recounted their bookers' struggles to line up interviews with Republicans. Blitzer came up empty; Bolduan landed one out of 55 requests.

There are two ways to view Republicans' shyness. It is significant that they are refusing to stand up for the president, ostensibly the head of their party. Yet it is also notable that so few, even those who have issued critical statements, are unwilling to elaborate in an interview setting.

A poll published Wednesday by NPR, PBS and Marist College offers insight into possible reasons. While a majority of Americans said the president's response to Charlottesville has not been strong enough, only 19 percent of GOP votersexpressed that view; 59 percent of Republicans said Trump's words have been sufficient.

By a 40-pointmargin, Republican voters are generally satisfied by the way Trump has handled Charlottesville. Republican politicians risk alienating those voters, if they come down too hard on the president.

The politically safe move, it appears, is to run for cover.

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Republicans are even avoiding Fox News when asked to talk about Trump and Charlottesville - Washington Post