THE PERMANENT CAMPAIGN JULY 7, 2011
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In the civics-book perspective on the American political system, presidential elections help make government work. They allow nominees to set a national agenda for the two major parties that transcend the regional differences and messy constituency-tending that so often occurs in Congress. And they pull the parties towards the political center, where swing voters live and bipartisanship thrives. This is made even more likely by occasions where you happen to have two candidates—say, an incumbent president and a challenger who is either a consensus nominee or a party leader in Congress—with a stake in successful governance and an eye trained on the general election. But the 2012 Republican presidential nomination contest is showing the flip-side of that proposition: In a highly competitive primary field where most of the candidates are not in federal office, and all are campaigning avidly against “Washington,” they are not exerting pressure on the party and its representatives in Congress to move towards “the center,” and, in many cases, they are pushing in the opposite direction.
The preeminent example of this dangerous feedback loop between the GOP presidential candidates and Republicans in Washington is the ongoing stalemate over the budget and the debt limit. The maximalist conservative position on the issue, called the “cut, cap and balance” pledge, was originally staked out by the House Study Committee and South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint. Designed to create an air-tight formula against any compromise with Democrats on the debt limit, the pledge includes two different methods for permanently limiting federal spending to a drastically lower percentage of GDP than currently prevails, a California-style constitutional provision requiring a super-majority for any tax increases, and a demand for immediate spending cuts beyond anything ever seriously discussed in Congress. Despite the fact that the pledge originated with extremists in Congress, nearly all the presidential candidates rushed to attach their names to it. As it stands, no fewer than six of them, including supposed “moderate” Mitt Romney, have signed on. Other than Jon Huntsman, the only holdout is Michele Bachmann, who is trying to stake out a position to the right of “cut, cap and balance” by making repeal of ObamaCare a precondition for any debt limit increase or budget deal.
What began as a fringe pledge, in other words, was soon elevated to Republican orthodoxy by the embrace it received from GOP presidential candidates competing to claim the “true conservative” mantle. In this way, Republican ultras in Congress are successfully using the presidential field to increase pressure on their own leadership to abandon negotiations with the White House and congressional Democrats. And with the Iowa Caucuses dominated by hard-core conservatives, and Senator DeMint standing astride next year’s all-important South Carolina presidential primary, it’s no surprise the strategy is working.
This upward ratcheting of pressure is also illustrated by yet another “pledge” recently demanded of presidential candidates by the upstart anti-abortion group, the Susan B. Anthony List. Breathtaking in its scope, the SBA pledge involves a commitment to appoint only certified “pro-life” figures to specific federal cabinet and sub-cabinet posts, support for sweeping bans on federal funding for any entity or contractor involved in entirely legal abortion services, and an agreement to promote and sign a federal version of the “fetal pain” bills, which ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy in defiance of past Supreme Court decisions, that are currently being enacted in several states. Confronted by the pledge, all but two presidential candidates—Mitt Romney and Herman Cain—promptly signed it, and the holdouts hastened to express their firm support for the complete abolition of abortion rights. The Republican line on abortion had once again shifted even further right, if possible, from where it had been before.
Finally, the GOP candidates’ reluctant embrace of Paul Ryan’s radical proposals to end Medicare as we know it has ensured that the contours of Ryan’s unpopular plan will continue to hold sway over the Republican Party going into 2012. Initially, the candidates cast a wary eye towards Ryan’s plan, even as nearly all House Republicans (and later Senate Republicans) voted for it. While praising the Wisconsin representative and making vague noises about their own determination to control entitlement spending, the candidates preserved their right to issue their own proposals in good time. But then Newt Gingrich spoiled the game by openly criticizing Ryan’s treatment of Medicare as “right-wing social engineering” that hadn’t a chance at public support, and in the ensuing furor the stampede began. One by one, Republican candidates, including a chastened Gingrich, lined up in support of Ryan’s entire budget, thereby making a virtual abolition of Medicare a party-wide stance that Republicans now cannot possibly hope to live down. (Indeed, the desire to obtain bipartisan cover for radical changes to Medicare is probably the only factor other than Wall Street pressure that is keeping alive congressional Republican interest in a budget deal with Obama).
It’s an open question whether Republican candidates are concerned about, or even aware of, the risks they are running by colluding in their party’s ideological bender, both in terms of their chances in the general election and in seeking to serve as president if elected. Mitt Romney, who is in the anomalous position of being transformed from the true conservative champion of 2008 to today’s moderate establishment candidate, even as he has become tangibly more conservative on the issues, probably understands it. But most conservatives appear convinced that 2012 will be a referendum on Barack Obama and the general direction of the country—one that Republicans can’t lose as long as their base turns out. And in the meantime, the complicity of the GOP presidential candidates in right-wing efforts to “stiffen the spine” of Republican officeholders against the temptations of bipartisan governance is contributing to genuine risks for the country.
Ed Kilgore is a special correspondent for The New Republic.
7 comments
Well said!
- paskunac
July 7, 2011 at 6:24am
Yup. But a related dynamic is moving Democratic candidates to the right as well. The reason GOP candidates, both for the White House and for Congress, are all tripping over each other in a rightward dash is that the the wingnut Republican base is very well organized, and it values ideological purity more than winning elections. Candidates know that should they stray from the hard right line, they'll get punished. The left, by contrast, has no such apparatus in place. Over and over again the Dems nominate "centrists" who a generation ago would have been seen as being well over to the right of center, and us lefties just hold our noses and vote for the schmuck because he has to be better than the Republican alternative, right? Right-of-center is the new normal. It's kind of like tattoos, how just twenty years for anyone to get a tat just on his arm was fairly outre, whereas now every frat boy and half the sorority chicks on the beach are sporting at least one tattoo and the real hipsters have to disfigure themselves with work on highly visible areas like their hands, their necks and even their faces just to stay out ahead of the squares.
- AaronW
July 7, 2011 at 8:57am
There is a very simple solution to all of this: ABOLISH PLURALITY VOTING! Why can't anybody of any prominence come out and that our electoral system, with its requirement for two stages, is an essential ingredient for giving the Tea Party crazies the power they have today? If we had one-stage, pairwise-ranked elections, mainstream Republicans could greet the Tea Party with an outstretched middle-finger and the Tea Party would not be able to anything of consequence unless they convince at least some Democrats to prefer them over the moderate Republican.
- sighthnd
July 7, 2011 at 10:28am
AaronW, I dunno, I imagine the Republican party is more on afterburner right now and burning through their fuel at a helluva rate. I don't think right of center is the new normal. We now have gays openly serving in the military, they can also get married in a significant portion of the country (and have civil unions in a lot more). We no longer have denial of care based on recission nor denial of coverage based on pre-existing conditions and in the near future 30 million Americans will have subsidized access to health care that they don't have now. We are also pulling out of Iraq and withdrawing many soldiers from Afghanistan and we are no longer anywhere near as much a unilateralist nation in foreign affairs. This is why I think the Republicans are so frenzied and desperate, one upping themselves in their craziness. The clock is against them. They are literally consuming their own base in their desire to gut Social security and Medicare (what would the party be without old people? A handful of southern racists and rich, evil scum like the Koch brothers) You and I know the Republicans are doomed to utter failure, even if they win they will lose as their policies will ruin America. The only question is how many people will they destroy in the process? If we can survive this tsunami of idiocy, long term the future will be better.
- blackton
July 7, 2011 at 1:52pm
You can't stand in the way of progress. Many try, all fail. But that doesn't stop them from achieving short-lived victories and having to be dragged, kicking and screaming, into the future.
- tealeaves
July 7, 2011 at 5:00pm
Blackton, couldn’t have said it better myself. If the Repub candidates are so ferociously one-upping themselves now, in JULY 2011, what amount of non-noxious fuel will be left in July 20112? A reasonable person could presume that Obama would out-eloquent, outwit and out-rationalize the Repub survivor in the presidential debates, but one never knows the landscape 15 months from now.
- OkiSaru
July 7, 2011 at 9:16pm
Maybe they'll go so far right they'll fall off the planet. One can hope.
- Sophia
July 8, 2011 at 12:33am